'Jihadi Jack' has a constitutional right to come to Canada. But getting in may not be so easy - Action News
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'Jihadi Jack' has a constitutional right to come to Canada. But getting in may not be so easy

Jack Letts has every right as a Canadian citizen to come to Canada, legal analysts say, butthe man dubbed "Jihadi Jack" by the media and accused of being an ISIS fighter may not have an easy time gettinginto the country

Letts could try to settle in Canada now that his U.K. citizenship has been stripped

Jack Letts in Syria with a beard and long brown hair looking toward the camera, wearing cargo pants and a camouflaged shirt, pointing his index finger toward the camera.
Jack Letts, also known as Jihadi Jack,is currently being detainedby Kurdish authorities in a prison innorthern Syria near the Turkish border. (Facebook)

Jack Letts has every right as a Canadian citizen to come to Canada, legal analysts say, butthe man dubbed "Jihadi Jack"by the media and accused of being an ISIS fighter may not have an easy time gettinginto the country.

"Citizenship doesn't actually give you the means to get into Canada," said Sharry Aiken, an associate law professor atQueen's University in Kingston, Ont.

Letts, who held dual citizenship with Britain and Canada,is currently being detainedby Kurdish authorities in a prison innorthern Syria near the Turkish border.But the possibility that he could eventually settle in Canada recently became an issue when it was revealed thatBritain had revoked his citizenship.

Letts himself, in an exclusive interview with the British-based ITV News on Monday, said he would like to come to Canada.

But Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodalehassaid the governmenthas no intention of helping him, saying Ottawa has"no obligation to facilitate his travel from his present circumstances, and we have no intention of facilitating that travel."

Charter protects right to enter and remain

It's true that the the governmentisn't obliged "to fish people out of detention or jail," abroad, saidAudrey Macklin, a law professor and chair in human rights at the University of Toronto. And Canada is certainly not obligated to provide Letts with a plane ticket if he is released from Kurdish detention.

However,the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, under the section of mobility rights, states that every Canadian citizen has the right to enter and remain in Canada.

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodalehassaid the government has said it has no intention of helping Lettsget into Canada. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

"If Mr. Letts could somehow extricatehimself out of Kurdish detention and, if he had a valid Canadian passport and somebody bought him an airline ticket and he pitched up at a Canadian border ... then would the Canadian government have a legal obligation to admit him?Yes," Macklin said.

As well, there is also the issue of how Letts is being treated while in Kurdish custody. Canada does have a duty, as do all countries, in protecting the human rights of its nationals, Macklin said.

If those rights are being violated and the remedy is to seek his return to Canada, "then there is an argument to be made that, in fact, at least the Canadian Charter imposes, and maybe international human rights law imposes,that responsibility on Canada," she said.

Could hold up passport

But the government could stonewall his return by refusing to issue a passport.Goodale, as minister of public safety, doeshavethe authority to refuse Lettsa passport, if he doesn't have one or it's no longer valid,on national security grounds.

The government could take thepositionthatbecause Letts went off tojoinISIS to fight against Syria is reason enough.

"But it all depends on all the facts of his case, the evidence before them, et cetera," saidArghavan Gerami, an Ottawa-based immigration lawyer. "It'shard to speculate not having all the details."

While Lettscould challenge adecision to refuse him a passport, it could be a long, drawn-out process, and would "significantly delay" his coming to Canada, Aiken said.

That is,"until and unless a court tells the government that withholding the document is unreasonable," she said.

Courts have found that mobilityrights arebreached if the Canadian government refuses to facilitate returnby, for example, not issuing emergency travel documents,Sean Rehaag, an associate law professor at York University's Osgoode Hall Law School, said in an email.

For example, theFederal Court of Canada in 2009 ordered the then-Conservative government to allow MontrealerAbousfian Abdelrazik, who had beenstranded in Sudan for six years as an al-Qaeda suspect, to return home.

Thegovernment had refused to issue him travel documents because his name was on a UN Security Council list banning travel for terrorist suspects. (He had denied any links to terrorism and iscurrently suing the federal government.)

The Federal Court of Canada in 2009 ordered the then Conservative government to allow MontrealerAbousfian Abdelrazik, who had beenstranded in Sudan for six years as an al-Qaeda suspect, to return home.
The Federal Court of Canada in 2009 ordered the then-Conservative government to allow MontrealerAbousfian Abdelrazik, who had beenstranded in Sudan for six years as an al-Qaeda suspect, to return home. (Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press)

The case against Letts is unclear.He became a Muslim convert andtravelledto Syria in 2014 to join fighters with the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. He was captured by the Kurdish YPG militiaafter escaping the extremist group's de facto capital, Raqqa, before it fell. Letts told ITVNews this week thatgoing to Syria "was probably the stupidest thing I've ever done."

But, he said, he's not a murderer or torturer."I never killed anyone," he said.

Still, if he came to Canada, he could be charged with a number of terror-relatedoffences, said Leah West,alecturer in national security law and counterterrorismat the Norman Paterson School of International Affairs at Carleton University in Ottawa.

"I don't think anyone has a good sense other than people potentially in that intelligence or security community and what he actually did there," West said.

"Butthese offences are still on the table."