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Great White North
Arar freed under pressure from Chretien
2004-11-10
Newly obtained documents shed light on how Maher Arar was freed from Syria only after direct communications between former prime minister Jean Chrétien and the President of Syria. "Excellency, in these troublesome days I would hope that you give urgent attention to this matter," Mr. Chrétien wrote to Syrian President Bashar Assad in July, 2003. People close to the Arar case say that the correspondence was crucial to winning the Canadian citizen's release from a Syrian jail three months after the letter was delivered. "I would further ask that consideration be given, on humanitarian and compassionate grounds, to having Mr. Arar released and permitted to return to Canada," Mr. Chrétien wrote. "I can assure you there is no Canadian government impediment to his return."

The letter was hand-delivered by Senator Pierre de Bané as the case was causing a growing public outcry in Canada. By the time the letter was sent, Mr. Arar now says, jailers in the police state had tortured him. And at the time, he was still facing the prospect of being tried as an alleged al-Qaeda member. The Chrétien correspondence will be examined at the public inquiry into Mr. Arar's detention, though there are no plans as yet to call the former prime minister as a witness. The inquiry, led by Mr. Justice Dennis O'Connor, has been bogged down by national-security issues. Public hearings that were suspended in the summer are not expected to resume before the mid- to late winter.

Researcher Ken Rubin obtained the Chrétien letter, which has not been made public before, through the Access to Information Act. Mr. Rubin obtained the materials on behalf of Mr. Arar, who spent a year jailed in the Middle East, and is now suing Canadian, U.S. and Syrian officials. In September, 2002, the computer engineer was deemed an al-Qaeda suspect by U.S. immigration authorities, who arrested him in a New York airport. They sent the Ottawa resident to his native Syria against his wishes. The U.S. suspicions flowed, at least partly, from an RCMP national-security investigation that continues today but which has yet to result in any arrests.
Posted by:Dan Darling

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