Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
International

Canadian 'Whistleblower' Detained For Years In Middle East To Learn Fate Tuesday

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Dec, 2019 11:04 PM

    MONTREAL - The family of a Canadian geologist jailed in Dubai on fraud charges is cautiously optimistic he'll be exonerated in a court hearing scheduled for Tuesday.

     

    Andre Gauthier has been detained off and on in the Middle East since December 2015, according to his son, Alexis.

     

    Alexis told The Canadian Press in a phone interview Monday from Quebec City that his father's troubles began when he alerted authorities in the United Arab Emirates to irregular dealings in a gold-trading company called Gold AE.

     

    Instead of being thanked for the information, Alexis says Gauthier was arrested and charged with committing the fraud he uncovered.

     

    Radha Stirling, with the UK-based legal specialist group Detained in Dubai, says what allegedly happened to Gauthier is common for foreigners in the UAE.

     

    Stirling was contacted by Gauthier's family at the beginning of his ordeal.

     

    "It's a common problem," Stirling said in an interview Monday from London. Stirling, a human rights advocate, began working for foreigners trapped in Dubai 12 years ago and has since expanded her work to other countries in the Gulf region.

     

    "People find themselves in companies, or are expats hired to do a particular job, and if there is an underlying scam (the companies) try and use the foreigners as a scapegoat," she said.

     

    Stirling says the Quebecer from the Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean region was a "whistleblower" who was set up by the people who committed fraud against the gold company's investors.

     

    Gauthier, 68, was jailed in Dubai without charges for about 18 months, beginning in December 2015. He was released but then convicted on fraud-related charges and sentenced to eight years in prison, Alexis said.

     

    He appealed, but fled the country before the appeal was completed and was caught in Oman. Gauthier was extradited to Dubai in May 2019. Alexis said since then, the court named an expert witness who came back with a report that vindicates his father.

     

    "We received the report in November and gave it to the judge," Alexis said. "The judge said he would have a final decision (on the appeal) Dec. 24."

     

    Alexis said his father is also facing civil court cases, "but the lawyers said they will hopefully fall with the criminal complaint."

     

    Both Alexis Gauthier and Radha Stirling commended the Canadian government for its help in trying to secure Gauthier's release. Stirling said federal official are "very hopeful" Gauthier will be exonerated on Tuesday.

     

    Former foreign affairs minister Chrystia Freeland called Gauthier before recently handing over her portfolio to the new minister, Francois-Philippe Champagne, Alexis said. And Alexis said he spoke with Champagne last Thursday.

     

    "We are confident," said Alexis. "But we don't want to have high expectations. We don't know why the verdict would be negative, but so many strange things have happened that we are trying to stay realistic."

     

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Japanese Student Hands In 'Blank' Report, Gets Full Marks. Here's Why

    A Japanese student of ninja history was recently commended by her teacher for handing in a blank sheet of paper on an assignment that required her to write an essay on ninjas.

    Japanese Student Hands In 'Blank' Report, Gets Full Marks. Here's Why

    WATCH: 15-Year-Old Indian-Origin Boy Ranveer Singh Sandhu Lauded As Britain's Youngest Accountant

    Ranveer Singh Sandhu, based in south London, has set himself a goal of becoming a millionaire by the time he turns 25 after he set up his first business when he was aged just 12 years.  

    WATCH: 15-Year-Old Indian-Origin Boy Ranveer Singh Sandhu Lauded As Britain's Youngest Accountant

    After Reptiles, Pakistani Singer Rabi Pirzada Poses With Suicide Bomber Vest To Threaten PM Narendra Modi

    After threatening to unleash reptiles on Prime Minister Narendra Modi over abrogation of Article 370 in Kashmir, Pakistani pop singer Rabi Pirzada is now warning him with a suicide attack.

    After Reptiles, Pakistani Singer Rabi Pirzada Poses With Suicide Bomber Vest To Threaten PM Narendra Modi

    US Urged To Save Hindu Principal Charged With Blasphemy In Pakistan

    As Pakistan's blasphemy laws guarantee the death penalty or life imprisonment, it has become common for radical Islamic groups in that country to slap blasphemy charges on locals who are unwilling to convert

    US Urged To Save Hindu Principal Charged With Blasphemy In Pakistan

    US Assures India Of 'Partnership', As Congress Members Criticise Kashmir Restrictions

    "When we see Indian institutions have failed or respond slowly it is something that we take up but this is not a relationship of dictation, it is a relationship of partnership," Alice Wells, the Acting Assistant Secretary of State

    US Assures India Of 'Partnership', As Congress Members Criticise Kashmir Restrictions

    Religious Conflict Over JUI's 'Azadi March' In Pakistan

    With Barelvi religious leaders opposing the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam Fazl's (JUI-F) proposed 'Azadi march', the religious and political differences between different sects in Pakistan have resurfaced.  

    Religious Conflict Over JUI's 'Azadi March' In Pakistan