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Ottawa

Sentencing arguments in Amanda Lindhout kidnapping case set for March

Sentencing arguments are slated for March 22 in the case of a Somali man found guilty of kidnapping of Amanda Lindhout.

Somali man found guilty last month of kidnapping Canadian journalist in 2008

Amanda Lindhout was kidnapped in Somalia in 2008 and held for more than a year. (Larry MacDougal/Canadian Press)

Sentencing arguments are slated for March 22 in the case of a Somaliman found guilty of kidnapping of Amanda Lindhout.

The one-day hearing will help Ontario Superior Court Justice Robert Smith decide a sentence for Ali Omar Ader, who faces up to life in prison.

Smith ruled in December that Ader, a 40-year-old Somalinational, was a "willing participant" in the 2008 hostage-taking of Lindhout, who was working as a freelance journalist near Mogadishu at the time.

The judge found much of Ader's testimony was unbelievable and did not support his claim that he was forced into serving as a negotiator and translator on behalf of a gang who threatened to harm him and his family.

A judge ruled in December 2017 that Somali national Ali Omar Ader was a 'willing participant' in the 2008 hostage-taking of Amanda Lindhout. The RCMP arrested him in Ottawa on June 11, 2015. (RCMP)

Lindhout, raised in Red Deer, Alta., and photographer Nigel Brennan of Australia, were snatched by armed men while pursuing a story, the beginning of 15 months in captivity.

The RCMP lured Ader to Canada on the pretext of signing a lucrative book-publishing deal, leading to his arrest in Ottawa in June 2015.