Refugee/Migrant Crisis

spaminator

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Two Canadian women arrested, RCMP seeks terrorist peace bonds
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Jim Bronskill
Published Apr 06, 2023 • Last updated 15 hours ago • 4 minute read

OTTAWA — The RCMP says its Federal Policing Integrated National Security Enforcement Team arrested two women at the Montreal-Trudeau International Airport and is seeking a terrorism peace bond against them under the Criminal Code.


Police say in a release Thursday that Ammara Amjad and Dure Ahmed appeared in Ontario provincial court by video conference for a bail hearing in relation to the peace bond applications.


RCMP say the matter was adjourned and the women remain in custody until their next scheduled court appearance on Tuesday.

“The success of this investigation can be attributed to the strength of our policing partnerships,” Chief Superintendent Matt Peggs said in the release.

“The RCMP stands fast against support to terrorism, including support to groups such as ISIS, and remains committed to the safety of all Canadians.”

Earlier Thursday, Lawrence Greenspon, a lawyer for the women, said the two had just returned from Syria and were arrested by the RCMP and faced bail hearings in Brampton, Ont.


Greenspon said the Crown is seeking terrorist peace bonds that would place strict conditions on them.

The two are among four Canadian women and 10 children who arrived in Montreal after being freed from prison camps in northeastern Syria.

There are many foreign nationals in Syrian camps run by Kurdish forces that reclaimed the war-ravaged region from the extremist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

Under a terrorism peace bond, a judge can order the defendant to enter into an arrangement to be of good behaviour or possibly face a prison sentence. Conditions such as a curfew or prohibition on having weapons might be attached.

Kimberly Polman, a British Columbia woman repatriated to Canada from Syria last year, was granted bail pending a peace bond hearing.


The latest flight to Canada had been expected to bring more people home from Syria.

Greenspon reached an agreement with the federal government in January to repatriate six Canadian women and 13 children who had been part of a court action.

However, two mothers and three children were not at a designated meeting point and missed the flight, Greenspon said Thursday. “They weren’t able to find them.”

He said he expects Global Affairs Canada will try to locate the five people and return them to Canada as well.

A Quebec mother and her six children, who also wanted to come to Canada, are not among the returnees either, Greenspon said.

While the six children have been ruled eligible for repatriation from Syria, their mother has been told she cannot join them because her security assessment is incomplete.


It is “inexcusable,” given that Global Affairs said in writing late last November that the woman and her children met the criteria for federal consideration of assistance to Canadians detained in the region, Greenspon said Thursday.

“It’s just ridiculous to put that up as an excuse.”

Asked about the family on Thursday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Canada will always protect Canadians in difficult situations overseas, but also make sure “we’re doing everything necessary to keep Canadians safe here at home.”

“For operational reasons, I won’t be commenting further.”

A federal judge recently directed Ottawa to also secure the release of four Canadian men from detention in northeastern Syria. The federal government has appealed that ruling.


In a statement Thursday, Global Affairs and Public Safety Canada said that amid reports of deteriorating conditions in the camps, “we have been particularly concerned about the health and well-being of Canadian children.”

“As long as conditions allow, we will continue this work.”

The departments thanked the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria for its co-operation and the United States for its assistance in the repatriation.

“Due to privacy considerations, we cannot provide information about the individuals, and we cannot share details of the repatriation for operational reasons.”

Little is known publicly about the 14 returnees or how they wound up in detention. RCMP officers recently visited Syria to conduct interviews in the camps.


“Where there is sufficient evidence, law enforcement and public safety agencies will independently take the necessary steps to keep our communities safe,” the federal departments said Thursday.

“We reiterate that it is a serious criminal offence for anyone to leave Canada to knowingly support a terrorist group and those who engage in these activities will face the full force of Canadian law.”

Washington appreciates Canada’s repatriation of the 14 women and children and stands ready to assist other nations in their efforts, said Vedant Patel, principal deputy spokesperson for the U.S. State Department.

Resolving the humanitarian and security challenges that followed the dismantling of ISIL’s so-called caliphate is a key priority for the United States and its partners, Patel said in a statement.

Approximately 10,000 people from more than 60 countries outside Syria and Iraq remain in two displaced persons camps in northeastern Syria, Patel added. “Repatriation is the only durable solution for this population, most of whom are vulnerable children under the age of 12.”

Separately, thousands of ISIL fighters are being held in detention facilities across the region, Patel said. “This constitutes the single largest concentration of detained terrorist fighters in the world and remains a threat to regional and international security.”
 

spaminator

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Canadian woman released from Syrian camp released on bail in Alberta
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Mia Rabson
Published Apr 07, 2023 • 3 minute read

OTTAWA — A Canadian woman who returned to Canada from a prison camp in northeastern Syria this week has been released on bail in Edmonton pending a terrorism peace bond application, Mounties in Alberta said Friday.


She was among four Canadian women and 10 children who landed in Montreal either late Wednesday or early Thursday, the largest single group Canada has repatriated from Syria, said lawyer Lawrence Greenspon, who has been helping get them home.


Three of the women were arrested upon arrival, while the fourth was not detained. Two of those arrested were sent to Brampton, Ont., where they will undergo a bail hearing Tuesday, Greenspon said.

The third was sent to Edmonton where a bail hearing was held Thursday. RCMP in Alberta said Friday the 38-year-old woman is subject to a number of conditions while she awaits the peace bond process but did not specify what those were.

The 10 children are all with relatives, said Greenspon.


On Jan. 18, Global Affairs Canada agreed that all of them could return to Canada, along with two other women and three additional children. Greenspon said the other two women and those three children did not make it on the plane and he does not yet know why.

“I’m confident that Global Affairs Canada will continue in good faith to do what they said they would do, which is to repatriate these two women and the three children,” he said.

“They are war refugees. They were on territory that was taken over by the Kurds, (who) have said to the countries of the world, ‘please come and take your nationals.”‘

The women and children were held for years at the al-Roj prison camp in northeastern Syria. It is one of two displaced persons camps in the region that is now controlled by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, which runs what is known as the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria.


The detainees in the camps are mostly women and children who were rounded up after the fall of the extremist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant in 2019. Some are relatives of suspected ISIS fighters, but they have never been brought before a court.

About 10,000 of them are foreign nationals from more than 60 countries outside Syria and Iraq. The Kurds have asked those countries to repatriate their citizens.

United Nations secretary-general Antonio Guterres said last month countries like Canada have a responsibility to bring their citizens home from the camps, which he says have the “worst possible conditions” and are depriving people of their rights.

Alexandra Bain, director of Families Against Violent Extremism, said she is trying to help 32 others in the camps return to Canada. That includes the two women and three children who missed the plane this week, and one additional Canadian woman and her six children.


Canada has agreed to allow her children to come back but haven’t yet issued a security clearance to the mother, who is from Quebec. RCMP officers recently visited the camps to interview the Canadians, but Bain said they didn’t speak French and the Quebec mother was unable to understand them.

She is working with four non-Canadian women who are mothers to 10 Canadian children living in the camps, and six Canadian men. Some of the men are fathers of the children, said Bain.

A Federal Court judge ruled On Jan. 20 that Canada must repatriate four Canadian men held in the camps. The federal government appealed that ruling and the appeal was heard in late March. A decision has not yet been issued.

Bain said if that ruling is upheld it will apply not just to the four men involved in the case but to any Canadians in the camps.


None of the women who were arrested upon arrival in Canada are charged with a crime, said Greenspon. Instead the Crown is seeking a terrorism peace bond, available when the Crown has reasonable grounds to fear an individual may commit a terrorism offence.

Such a bond would require an individual to maintain good behaviour and follow specific conditions for up to a year or face a possible prison sentence. The conditions could include a curfew and refraining from communicating with certain other people, said Greenspon.

A terrorism peace bond is also being sought for Kimberly Polman, a British Columbia woman repatriated to Canada from Syria last year.

Greenspon said Polman was granted bail pending a hearing for the peace bond, which has not yet taken place.
 

spaminator

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Two alleged brides of ISIS are home and free on bail

Author of the article:Michele Mandel
Published Apr 11, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read
The women were repatriated with their children last week from Syria detention camps and released on strict conditions including house arrest

Forgive us if we’re not keen on rolling out the welcome mat.


Just days after they were repatriated with their children from a Syrian displaced persons’ camp, two alleged ISIS wives have just won their freedom on Canadian soil. Ammara Amjad and Dure Ahmed were granted bail in two separate Brampton court hearings Tuesday, with each having to abide by a long list of conditions, including strict house arrest.


Amjad displayed little emotion in the prisoner’s box as the judge approved her release plan: two sureties will post $15,000 each and she must live with them in their home. She must wear a GPS monitor and can leave only to take her children to and from school, to attend work, medical or dental appointments, and counselling arranged by the RCMP Specialized Investigative Intervention Team.


Not allowed to use a cellphone, Amjad can call on a landline to contact her lawyer, the RCMP, or her RCMP-approved counsellor as long as one of her sureties is present at the start and end of the conversation.

She’s not to access any device with an internet connection, use social media or access violent extremist materials.

Amjad was also ordered not to communicate with a number of people, including Hamza Parvez. A search for a man by that name reveals a British-born ISIS fighter stripped of his citizenship who was dubbed “Hungry Hamza” by the British tabloids for his posts about food.

She must surrender all travel documents and isn’t allowed to drive a car.

The submissions by the Crown and defence and the judges’ reasons for the women’s release are covered by a publication ban.


Ahmed, who appeared in a different courtroom, was featured in a 2019 CNN report as the last ISIS enclave of Baghouz Al-Fawqani was about to fall in 2019. She told the reporter she followed her husband to Syria in 2014 and claimed she didn’t know anything about the evils of the Islamic State.

But she had no regrets.

Asked if she knew anything of Yezidi women being enslaved and slaughtered by ISIS, Ahmed told CNN she’d only heard about it. “Well, having slaves is part of Sharia,” the mother of two shrugged. “I believe in Sharia, wherever Sharia is. We must follow whoever is implementing the way, the law.”

The two were among four Canadian women and 10 children who arrived April 6, the largest single group Canada has repatriated from Syria. When they landed in Montreal, Amjad and Ahmed were arrested by the RCMP Federal Policing Integrated National Security Enforcement Team (INSET) pending a terrorism peace bond application. A third woman in their group was also arrested and later released on bail in Edmonton.


All four are now out of custody, with none facing criminal charges.

In January, Ottawa agreed to bring home 19 Canadian women and children detained in northeastern Syria. In return, their families dropped their federal court case accusing the government of violating their Charter rights by not repatriating their citizens.

Are these freed women remorseful? Do they regret travelling to Syria and allegedly joining a terror group behind so much death and destruction? Have they sworn not to recruit others to the death cult? We’re not allowed to know.

This much is clear — their poor children did nothing wrong and deserve to be home. But their mothers, who willingly traipsed into a war zone where infidels were beheaded? No, I won’t be hosting a welcome back party.

Both women are scheduled to return to court May 12 as their peace bond process begins.

mmandel@postmedia.com
 

Ron in Regina

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The Trudeau Liberals are planning to remove nearly all grounds the Immigration department uses to exclude applicants, the Toronto Sun has learned.

It has been the Trudeau government’s goal since 2020 to increase Canada’s intake of immigrants and refugees by nearly one-third to 400,000 annually.

How they plan to achieve this elevated level is outlined in an internal draft document sent to immigration and refugee judges — documents that have been exclusively shared with the Sun.

In an email sent to staff and adjudicators on Sept. 20, Richard Wex, the Liberals’ appointee as chairperson and chief executive officer of the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, laid out a massive expansion of the reasons immigrants can be allowed to enter and stay in Canada.

Under the new guidelines, contained in a document marked “Draft” and covered by solicitor-client privilege, civil service officers who do an initial screening of immigration and refugee claims, plus the immigration and refugee judges who hear appeals of the officers’ decisions, are instructed to accept any applicant who has an “intersectional” claim.

Intersectionality is defined as two or more of “race, religion, indigeneity, political beliefs, socioeconomic status, age, sexual orientation, culture, disability, or immigration status,” that “impact an individual’s lived experience of discrimination, marginalization or oppression.”

No longer will claimants need to prove, for instance, that they face torture or death if forced to return to their home countries. Nor will they have to satisfy the UN’s definition of a “refugee.”

“This is a long article, and the guts of it are still at the link above…this is the story the Liberal Gov’t is trying to have Twitter & Facebook (and the Sun) remove links to.”

These new rules render examining refugees’ claims pointless.

Adjudicators, essentially, must now say yes to everyone who makes it to Canadian soil and claims (not proves, merely claims) they are a victim of two more of a broad range of abuses — some invisible and mild.

Already, 22 of just over 300 adjudicators already admit 100% of the claimants appearing before them. (The median acceptance rate across the country is about 70%.)

Accepting 100% of claims is an impossibly high rate, unless these 22 judges are deliberately looking to admit anyone and everyone. Most of the 22 are Liberal appointees. Now it would appear they are to be the models for all the other adjudicators.

How long do you think it will take for word to get out around the world that Canada, which is already one of the countries most open to immigration, is removing all barriers and throwing the doors open wide?
 
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spaminator

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Canada inches closer to Afghan resettlement target, could reach 40,000 by end of year
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Apr 12, 2023 • 1 minute read

OTTAWA — More than 300 people from Afghanistan arrived in Canada on Wednesday, bringing the total number of Afghans resettled since the Taliban takeover of that country to more than 30,000, the federal government said.


A flight from Pakistan arrived at Toronto’s Pearson International Airport Wednesday morning.


Those on board included people who helped Canada’s mission in Afghanistan, family members of former interpreters and privately sponsored refugees.

After the Taliban swept to power in August 2021, Canada promised to resettle at least 40,000 Afghans through a number of special programs.

Ottawa has faced criticism for its chaotic attempts to get people to safety as the Taliban took over Kabul, with many pointing out that Canada closed its embassy earlier than other countries did.

The federal government says it is now on track to reach the 40,000 target by the end of 2023, but it acknowledges in a news release that there will be significant challenges.


Canada is prioritizing the most vulnerable Afghans, “including woman leaders, human-rights defenders, persecuted and religious minorities, 2SLGBTQI+ individuals and journalists,” says a news release from the Immigration Department.

As of the end of March, 18,000 people had applied to come to Canada as part of a special immigration program meant for people who helped Canadian diplomats and troops during the mission, as well as their families.

So far, 11,990 applications had been approved, but only 9,875 had arrived in Canada by March 30, according to data published by the Immigration Department.

Another special program has been created to help the extended family members of former interpreters who are already living in Canada. The government says it aims to bring 5,000 people in through that stream, and 1,285 had arrived by the end of March.

Another 15,875 people who fall under government-assisted and privately sponsored refugee programs were in Canada by that time.
 

spaminator

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Missing Canadian women and girls called family from Syrian camp, lawyer says
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Emily Blake
Published Apr 18, 2023 • 2 minute read

A lawyer for two Canadian women and three teen girls, who were set to be repatriated from northeastern Syria earlier this month, says they were mistreated by guards and are being detained in a camp primarily holding family members of individuals with alleged links to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant


Edmonton lawyer Zachary Al-Khatib said one of the women was able to make a brief phone call to a family member in Canada early Tuesday. He said the woman indicated they were alive and had been moved to the Roj camp but had been mistreated, needed medical attention and had all their possessions taken.


“It was very concerning for the family obviously to hear this after 11 days of nothing,” he said.

Under an agreement with Global Affairs Canada, the group of five was set to be transported from the Al-Hol camp, where they had been detained, to the Roj camp to join four other women and 10 children.The others were returned to Canada on April 6.

Al-Khatib said while those still in Syria were concerned about their safety, the Canadian government told them they had communicated with Kurdish forces running the Al-Hol camp.


“They were given assurances that they would be safe,” he said. “Then when they presented themselves to be transported, they went missing for 11 days and the government had no answers.”

Al-Khatib said Canada needs to take immediate steps to ensure the women and girls are safe and repatriated.

“The government has been silent on this,” he said.

“The government has to provide answers to the family and to the public.”

Al-Khatib said he does not know why the women, ages 41 and 33, originally travelled to Syria, but he has not been shown any evidence of criminal intent or that they broke the law.

Global Affairs Canada did not respond to a request for comment.

Human Rights Watch said in December that since ISIS’s territorial defeat in 2019, more than 42,400 foreigners accused of links to ISIS have been held in camps and prisons in northeastern Syria, most of them children. It said medical care, clean water, shelter and education in the camps are “grossly inadequate.”
 

petros

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Missing Canadian women and girls called family from Syrian camp, lawyer says
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Emily Blake
Published Apr 18, 2023 • 2 minute read

A lawyer for two Canadian women and three teen girls, who were set to be repatriated from northeastern Syria earlier this month, says they were mistreated by guards and are being detained in a camp primarily holding family members of individuals with alleged links to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant


Edmonton lawyer Zachary Al-Khatib said one of the women was able to make a brief phone call to a family member in Canada early Tuesday. He said the woman indicated they were alive and had been moved to the Roj camp but had been mistreated, needed medical attention and had all their possessions taken.


“It was very concerning for the family obviously to hear this after 11 days of nothing,” he said.

Under an agreement with Global Affairs Canada, the group of five was set to be transported from the Al-Hol camp, where they had been detained, to the Roj camp to join four other women and 10 children.The others were returned to Canada on April 6.

Al-Khatib said while those still in Syria were concerned about their safety, the Canadian government told them they had communicated with Kurdish forces running the Al-Hol camp.


“They were given assurances that they would be safe,” he said. “Then when they presented themselves to be transported, they went missing for 11 days and the government had no answers.”

Al-Khatib said Canada needs to take immediate steps to ensure the women and girls are safe and repatriated.

“The government has been silent on this,” he said.

“The government has to provide answers to the family and to the public.”

Al-Khatib said he does not know why the women, ages 41 and 33, originally travelled to Syria, but he has not been shown any evidence of criminal intent or that they broke the law.

Global Affairs Canada did not respond to a request for comment.

Human Rights Watch said in December that since ISIS’s territorial defeat in 2019, more than 42,400 foreigners accused of links to ISIS have been held in camps and prisons in northeastern Syria, most of them children. It said medical care, clean water, shelter and education in the camps are “grossly inadequate.”
Why on God's green Earth would these woman and kids go to Syria in the first fucking place after seeking refuge in Canada? They left a light on?
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Missing Canadian women and girls called family from Syrian camp, lawyer says
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Emily Blake
Published Apr 18, 2023 • 2 minute read

A lawyer for two Canadian women and three teen girls, who were set to be repatriated from northeastern Syria earlier this month, says they were mistreated by guards and are being detained in a camp primarily holding family members of individuals with alleged links to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant


Edmonton lawyer Zachary Al-Khatib said one of the women was able to make a brief phone call to a family member in Canada early Tuesday. He said the woman indicated they were alive and had been moved to the Roj camp but had been mistreated, needed medical attention and had all their possessions taken.


“It was very concerning for the family obviously to hear this after 11 days of nothing,” he said.

Under an agreement with Global Affairs Canada, the group of five was set to be transported from the Al-Hol camp, where they had been detained, to the Roj camp to join four other women and 10 children.The others were returned to Canada on April 6.

Al-Khatib said while those still in Syria were concerned about their safety, the Canadian government told them they had communicated with Kurdish forces running the Al-Hol camp.


“They were given assurances that they would be safe,” he said. “Then when they presented themselves to be transported, they went missing for 11 days and the government had no answers.”

Al-Khatib said Canada needs to take immediate steps to ensure the women and girls are safe and repatriated.

“The government has been silent on this,” he said.

“The government has to provide answers to the family and to the public.”

Al-Khatib said he does not know why the women, ages 41 and 33, originally travelled to Syria, but he has not been shown any evidence of criminal intent or that they broke the law.

Global Affairs Canada did not respond to a request for comment.

Human Rights Watch said in December that since ISIS’s territorial defeat in 2019, more than 42,400 foreigners accused of links to ISIS have been held in camps and prisons in northeastern Syria, most of them children. It said medical care, clean water, shelter and education in the camps are “grossly inadequate.”
Visit beautiful downtown Damascus! It's the city that rhymes with "barrel-bomb!"
 

spaminator

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Hassan Diab's supporters urge Canada to rebuff extradition after guilty verdict
Diab was tried in absentia in Paris for the attack on a synagogue that killed four and wounded 46

Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Jim Bronskill
Published Apr 21, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 1 minute read

OTTAWA — Supporters of Hassan Diab are calling on Canada to refuse any new extradition request from France after a court found the Ottawa sociology professor guilty of a 1980 bombing.


Diab, who has always maintained innocence, was tried in absentia in Paris for the attack on a synagogue that killed four and wounded 46.


A French court sentenced Diab to life in prison today and issued an arrest warrant for him.

Following lengthy proceedings that went all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada, Diab was extradited to France where he spent three years behind bars, including time in solitary confinement.

French judges dismissed the allegations against him in January 2018 and ordered his immediate release, allowing him to return to Ottawa where he lives with his wife and children.

In May 2021, a French court upheld a decision directing Diab to stand trial, a ruling his Canadian lawyer called inexplicable.
 

Serryah

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Hassan Diab's supporters urge Canada to rebuff extradition after guilty verdict
Diab was tried in absentia in Paris for the attack on a synagogue that killed four and wounded 46

Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Jim Bronskill
Published Apr 21, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 1 minute read

OTTAWA — Supporters of Hassan Diab are calling on Canada to refuse any new extradition request from France after a court found the Ottawa sociology professor guilty of a 1980 bombing.


Diab, who has always maintained innocence, was tried in absentia in Paris for the attack on a synagogue that killed four and wounded 46.


A French court sentenced Diab to life in prison today and issued an arrest warrant for him.

Following lengthy proceedings that went all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada, Diab was extradited to France where he spent three years behind bars, including time in solitary confinement.

French judges dismissed the allegations against him in January 2018 and ordered his immediate release, allowing him to return to Ottawa where he lives with his wife and children.

In May 2021, a French court upheld a decision directing Diab to stand trial, a ruling his Canadian lawyer called inexplicable.

So... he was accused of a crime, tried, extradited, the allegations dismissed after he spent time behind bars, released, then later the charges were upheld??

Something about this stinks and if this was in all the Canadian system, he wouldn't be going back to jail until it was sorted.

If he was already tried and convicted but then released, would this not be double jeopardy if he's being tried again?
 
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Taxslave2

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So... he was accused of a crime, tried, extradited, the allegations dismissed after he spent time behind bars, released, then later the charges were upheld??

Something about this stinks and if this was in all the Canadian system, he wouldn't be going back to jail until it was sorted.

If he was already tried and convicted but then released, would this not be double jeopardy if he's being tried again?
It does seem like there is a lot we are not being told. Does double jeopardy apply in France? Their system is quite different from ours. Herr double jeopardy applies after a trial, not before.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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It does seem like there is a lot we are not being told. Does double jeopardy apply in France? Their system is quite different from ours. Herr double jeopardy applies after a trial, not before.
It would depend on the basis of the "dismissal." The term implies the charges were dismissed without trial. Usually (but not always) that leaves the door open to new charges in the future.

The "double jeopardy" or "once in jeopardy" rule was established back when there were far, far fewer laws. One of the many problems we face is that for just about any action you take, several different laws apply. Theoretically, the prosecution is supposed to bring all possible charges at one go, and the "event or occurrence" should be done with after that one proceeding. In reality, prosecutors and governments often try, frequently successfully, to circumvent the once-in-jeopardy rule.

Sorry, the specific answer to your question is that France does generally have a version of the once-in-jeopardy rule. But the caveats above apply.
 

spaminator

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Efforts resuming to repatriate five missing Canadians from Syria, lawyer says
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published May 04, 2023 • 1 minute read

OTTAWA — A lawyer working to repatriate Canadians from detention in Syria says there is fresh word about two women and three children who had originally been slated to return to Canada last month.


Lawyer Lawrence Greenspon said Global Affairs Canada has confirmed that it has recently been in contact with Kurdish authorities in northeastern Syria about the five Canadians.


The department has obtained assurances the authorities will help facilitate their repatriation after they did not turn up for the flight that brought 14 other Canadians to Canada last month, he said.

Greenspon said although no time frame has been specified, it gives the families of the two women and three children hope for the return of their loved ones.

Edmonton lawyer Zachary Al-Khatib, who is also representing the five Canadians, said in mid-April one of the women was able to make a brief phone call to a family member in Canada but the call was cut off.


He said then that the woman indicated they were alive and had been moved to the al-Roj camp but had been mistreated, needed medical attention and had all their possessions taken.

Global Affairs spokesman Grantly Franklin said Thursday the department had received “credible information” that the women and children have been located in al-Roj camp, but he offered no other details.

Greenspon reached an agreement with the federal government in January to bring home six Canadian women and 13 children who had been part of a court action.

As long as conditions allow, Global Affairs will continue to work toward fulfilling the agreement, Franklin said. “Due to privacy and operational security considerations, we cannot comment further.”

There are many foreign nationals in the Syrian camps run by Kurdish forces that reclaimed the war-ravaged region from the extremist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.