Canada appeals ruling to repatriate citizens in Syria

Story By: BBC

Canada has appealed a court decision that ordered it to repatriate four men imprisoned in Islamic State camps in Syria.

It is also reportedly asking women held in the camps to relinquish custody of their Canadian children in order for the minors to be repatriated.

The mothers are not Canadian nationals, but the children have citizenship because their fathers are.

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Human rights campaigners have pushed the country to repatriate its citizens.

In January, Canada agreed to bring back six women and 13 children, but pushed back on repatriating the four men, arguing it had no obligation to provide support or bring back citizens from Syria because it had closed its embassy there in 2012.

But a recent federal court ruling ordered the government to repatriate the men, who have not been formally charged with crimes. British-Canadian dual national, Jack Letts, whose British citizenship was revoked, is one of the four.

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In the appeal filed on Friday, Canada challenged that ruling, which concluded the country had violated the men’s constitutional rights.

Canada asked that the court order be stayed pending the appeal’s outcome.

The repatriation of the four men, as well as the women and children, would be the largest so far for Canada after the so-called Islamic State caliphate was destroyed in 2019.

Pushback on repatriating non-Canadian mothers
In a separate case, some women living in camps in north-east Syria say they have been told their children can only come to Canada without them.

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In correspondence seen by the BBC, Canada’s foreign ministry contacted one of the mothers in November, saying in a letter that it would review whether her children are eligible to be brought to Canada given “deteriorating conditions” in the camps.

The letter says the country’s policy for repatriation “only applies to Canadians”.

The mothers were contacted by the government again on 26 January, said Prof Alexandra Bain, the director of the Canada-based Families Against Violent Extremism non-profit organisation.

Prof Bain, who has been in contact with a number of Canadians detained in the camps, said the women told her they had been asked to consider sending their children to Canada alone.

The women said they were given a deadline of a week-and-a-half to make the decision.

She is aware of four foreign mothers who have 10 children in total, most under the age of seven. The fathers are either dead or imprisoned, she said.

“Most of these children are very young, and some are even born in the camp,” Prof Bain said, calling it inhumane for Canada to request that the families be separated.

The deadline given to the mothers has since passed, and the women remain in the camps with their children.

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