Close X
Saturday, October 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian resident still detained in Egypt despite release order, family says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Jan, 2015 11:12 AM

    TORONTO — An ailing Canadian resident remains under detention in a hospital in Egypt despite an order given more than a week ago by the country's attorney general for his release, his family said Tuesday.

    It was not immediately clear why Khaled Al-Qazzaz, a father of four, had yet to be freed.

    In an interview, his wife said the family's jubilation at the release order has given way to worry at his ongoing detention.

    "Our initial reaction last week was happiness and excitement," Sarah Attia told The Canadian Press.

    "We're getting a little nervous because it's taking so long but we're trying to remain positive and hopeful that this will end in a few days."

    Al-Qazzaz, 35, a University of Toronto engineering graduate, is a former aide to ousted president Mohammed Morsi. He was arrested along with Morsi and eight other aides in July 2013 when the Egyptian military removed the president from office. Egyptian authorities never charged him nor explained why they arrested him.

    The case has attracted attention from human rights activists and groups, such as Amnesty International.

    Attia, 34, said the attorney general's release order issued Monday last week has been communicated to Al-Qazzaz and his lawyers and should have taken only two or three days to be executed.

    "It's hard to tell at this point what is holding it back," she said from her home in Toronto. "We don't know if it's just technicalities or if there's another reason."

    Al-Qazzaz is said to be suffering from a severe spinal condition related to his detention and is in need of surgery. The hope, Attia said, is that he will be able to fly back to Canada as soon as he's free so he can undergo needed surgery.

    He was transferred to hospital in Cairo from solitary confinement two months ago — after apparently losing motion in his arms and suffering severe pain. The Toronto-born Attia said she had not had a chance to talk directly to him but his family in Egypt has.

    The couple, who met when she was also studying engineering at the University of Toronto, went to Egypt in 2005 to open a school before getting caught up in the turmoil that saw Al-Qazzaz arrested at the president's office.

    The couple's boy and three girls, aged 2 to 8, are excited at the prospect of seeing their father again, even though the youngest would not recognize him, their mom said.

    "I try to keep them hopeful, still," she said.

    "He needs to come here to be with us ... and to put his life back together."

    In a separate case, an Egyptian court on New Year's Day ordered a new trial for Canadian-Egyptian Mohammed Fahmy and two other Al-Jazeera journalists.

    The trio was arrested in Cairo in December 2013 and accused of spreading rumours harmful to national security. They were convicted last June — the judge said they were brought together by the devil to destabilize the country — and Fahmy was sentenced to seven years.

    Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird, who has previously raised Al-Qazzaz's case with the current Egyptian regime, was slated to fly to Cairo this month.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Key points of Rob Ford's political career

    Key points of Rob Ford's political career
    TORONTO - Toronto voters head to the polls next week to chose a successor to Mayor Rob Ford, who dropped out of the race for re-election after being diagnosed with cancer. Ford is running for city council. Here are some key points of his political career:

    Key points of Rob Ford's political career

    Outside monitor sought for autopsies of Winnipeg's storage locker babies

    Outside monitor sought for autopsies of Winnipeg's storage locker babies
    WINNIPEG - A Winnipeg woman accused of concealing the bodies of six babies has made her first court appearance.

    Outside monitor sought for autopsies of Winnipeg's storage locker babies

    Court Hears Challenge To Law That Allows Stripping of Canadian Citizenship

    Court Hears Challenge To Law That Allows Stripping of Canadian Citizenship
    TORONTO - Constitutional lawyers are in Federal Court today, challenging a law that allows the government to strip a Canadian-born person of their citizenship

    Court Hears Challenge To Law That Allows Stripping of Canadian Citizenship

    Outgoing Mayor Rob Ford: Infamous And Popular

    Outgoing Mayor Rob Ford: Infamous And Popular
    TORONTO - When Toronto voters head to the polls next week, they will be choosing a successor to the county's most infamous mayor — a man known to the world for his outrageous behaviour, his profanities, his mule-like obstinacy, and his shocking admissions of cocaine use during drunken stupors.

    Outgoing Mayor Rob Ford: Infamous And Popular

    Man detained as Harper lays wreath at war memorial shooting scene

    Man detained as Harper lays wreath at war memorial shooting scene
    OTTAWA - A man was detained by police this morning not far from Stephen Harper as the prime minister stopped by the National War Memorial to pay tribute to Cpl. Nathan Cirillo.

    Man detained as Harper lays wreath at war memorial shooting scene

    House of Commons gets underway in wake of stunning Parliament Hill attack

    House of Commons gets underway in wake of stunning Parliament Hill attack
    OTTAWA - Canada's seat of government put on a back-slapping display of fortitude and common purpose Thursday as MPs convened in the shadow of a brazen, deadly attack.

    House of Commons gets underway in wake of stunning Parliament Hill attack