Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Arthur Porter Invites Harper To Visit Him In Jail During PM's Visit To Panama

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Apr, 2015 11:15 AM
    OTTAWA — When Stephen Harper arrives in Panama on Friday it will bring him within a short drive of a man he'd probably rather forget: alleged fraudster Arthur Porter.
     
    For his part, Porter, who's been jailed in Panama City for nearly two years, still thinks about the man who made him a member of Canada's spy watchdog a few years ago.
     
    He also has a message for Harper.
     
    Porter told The Canadian Press in a recent phone interview from La Joya prison that he wouldn't mind a visit from Harper while the prime minister is in the region this weekend for the Summit of the Americas.
     
    "If he wishes, he is most welcome to come and see the conditions that I live in now," Porter said of Harper during the conversation, which was drowned out at times by the shouts of other inmates in the background.
     
    "The (prison) air is the same, the infections are the same, the difficulties in finding water and food are the same. You know, some days are better than others."
     
    Porter has been detained since May 2013 in the Central American country as he fights extradition to Canada. He faces fraud charges in Canada related to a $1.3-billion hospital project in Montreal.
     
    It has been a long fall from grace for a man who won the trust of many high-level Canadian officials and politicians, including Harper.
     
    Harper has faced criticism for choosing Porter as well other past appointments, including now-suspended senators Mike Duffy, Patrick Brazeau and Pamela Wallin, who are all in trouble over expense claims.
     
    The prime minister named Porter in 2008 to the Security Intelligence Review Committee, which monitors the Canadian Security Intelligence Service. 
     
    In joining SIRC, Porter was also sworn to the Privy Council and he remains a member.
     
    Porter was elevated to SIRC's chair two years later but resigned in December 2011 following published reports of his business links to an international arms dealer.
     
    After moving to the Bahamas, he was arrested along with his wife, Pamela, during a flight layover in Panama.
     
    Since his arrest, he claims he's had no contact "whatsoever" with Canadian authorities and has yet to have a court hearing in Panama.
     
    Still, the Sierra Leone-born doctor says he would rather stay in the prison and fight extradition than return to Canada, a country where he now mistrusts authorities.
     
    "I don't think I have a level playing field in Canada and I certainly am not interested in getting penalized for something that I am not guilty for," said Porter, who is a cancer specialist.
     
    Before his arrest two years ago, Porter revealed he was suffering from stage four lung cancer and likely had three months to live.
     
    He credits his survival to treatments he says knocked the cancer into remission. But he fears the disease is re-emerging and was recently told by friend Dr. Karol Sikora that he may only have six weeks to six months left. 
     
    "I am still a tremendous optimist," Porter said through a muffled, raspy voice.
     
    "Of course, being an oncologist, I also know the score."
     
    Sikora, who ran a cancer clinic with Porter in the Bahamas, based his estimate on email conversations with his friend and has not examined him in person.
     
    The U.K. physician also wrote an email last week to Harper, urging him to raise Porter's situation with Panamanian officials while he's in the country.
     
    "It is just amazing that this sort of human rights abuse of all prisoners not just Arthur can occur today in a civilized country," Sikora wrote in the email to Harper, which he forwarded to The Canadian Press.
     
    Sikora, who also sent Harper some of Porter's medical records, said the jailed physician was in urgent need of scans, tests and a new course of treatment.
     
    Aside from the invitation to visit him in jail, Porter said he doesn't have any specific message for Harper, who will meet with hemispheric leaders at the summit on Friday and Saturday.
     
    He hopes someone will ensure he gets access to adequate medical care and speed up his legal process.
     
    Porter feels his case got a boost following a recent report by the United Nations special rapporteur on torture. The brief UN report said that Porter is being held in degrading and inhuman conditions and has been denied medical treatment.
     
    "I am here not at the request of Panama, but at the request of Canada," Porter said.
     
    "They need to know the conditions that led to the UN finding that was against the convention against torture."
     
    His frustration, he added, is not directed at Harper himself.
     
    "I'm not unhappy about the man, but I am certainly unhappy about the government," he said.
     
    A spokesman for the Foreign Affairs Department said in an email that Porter has received consular services and that the government will provide more help if necessary.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Guide To Your Apple Watch Options: 54 Combinations Of Case, Band, Size

    Guide To Your Apple Watch Options: 54 Combinations Of Case, Band, Size
    NEW YORK — Apple Watch comes with a choice of watch case, band and size — there are 54 possible configurations in all.

    Guide To Your Apple Watch Options: 54 Combinations Of Case, Band, Size

    Classes Cancelled At Quebec University After Vandalism And Clashes With Cops

    Classes Cancelled At Quebec University After Vandalism And Clashes With Cops
    MONTREAL — Classes in a building at a downtown Montreal university are cancelled for the day after students occupied it for several hours and ended up clashing with police.

    Classes Cancelled At Quebec University After Vandalism And Clashes With Cops

    Rogers Sees Drop In Customer Info Requests From Police, Security Agencies

    Rogers Sees Drop In Customer Info Requests From Police, Security Agencies
    OTTAWA — Rogers Communications says it saw a sharp drop in the number of requests for customer information from government and police agencies last year — a result of swelling public concern and a landmark court ruling on telecommunications privacy.

    Rogers Sees Drop In Customer Info Requests From Police, Security Agencies

    U.S. Sperm Bank Sued By Canadian Couple Says It Didn't Verify Donor Information

    U.S. Sperm Bank Sued By Canadian Couple Says It Didn't Verify Donor Information
    A U.S.-based sperm bank says it didn't verify the information of a donor that is at the heart of a lawsuit by a Canadian couple who allege they weren't told their donor was a schizophrenic with a criminal record.

    U.S. Sperm Bank Sued By Canadian Couple Says It Didn't Verify Donor Information

    Crews Work To Contain Fuel Spill In Vancouver's English Bay

    Crews Work To Contain Fuel Spill In Vancouver's English Bay
    VANCOUVER — A fuel spill has spread over areas of Vancouver's English Bay, coating waters in an oily sheen.

    Crews Work To Contain Fuel Spill In Vancouver's English Bay

    Taxpayers Not Made To Foot The Bill For Harper Makeup Artist: Government Source

    Taxpayers Not Made To Foot The Bill For Harper Makeup Artist: Government Source
    OTTAWA — The prime minister might have had his makeup done alongside Sen. Mike Duffy in 2010 on one of their many appearances together, but a government source says the taxpayer didn't pick up the tab for that type of service.

    Taxpayers Not Made To Foot The Bill For Harper Makeup Artist: Government Source