Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Catalan Leader Goes To Court After Canada Refuses Him Entry For Speaking Visit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Apr, 2019 08:24 PM

    MONTREAL — A Quebec nationalist group is claiming the Canadian government revoked a travel permit for the exiled former president of Spain's Catalonia region.


    The Societe Saint-Jean-Baptiste says the Canadian government did not provide a reason for cancelling Catalan separatist Carles Puigdemont's travel permit on March 31, two days before he was to arrive in Quebec.


    Puigdemont has hired a Montreal-based immigration lawyer and today filed a motion contesting the decision in Federal Court.


    Puigdemont was scheduled to take part in an event organized by the nationalist group, which advocates for Quebec independence as well as for stronger laws to promote French in the province.


    The former Catalan president fled Spain in 2017 to avoid prosecution after his regional government held an unauthorized referendum on independence. Puigdemont is currently in exile in Brussels and is considered a fugitive by the Spanish government.


    He faces up to 25 years behind bars if found guilty of rebellion and misuse of public funds.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Kenney, Scheer Launch Two-Pronged Attack On Notley And Trudeau At Calgary Rally

    Kenney, Scheer Launch Two-Pronged Attack On Notley And Trudeau At Calgary Rally
    The two told a rally of hundreds of supporters gathered on a baseball diamond in Calgary that political change for Alberta and the country is in the wind.

    Kenney, Scheer Launch Two-Pronged Attack On Notley And Trudeau At Calgary Rally

    Institute Unveils 'Team Canada Of Cancer Research' In City Where Fox Began Run

    Institute Unveils 'Team Canada Of Cancer Research' In City Where Fox Began Run
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — It is being touted as the "Team Canada of cancer research."

    Institute Unveils 'Team Canada Of Cancer Research' In City Where Fox Began Run

    Supreme Court Upholds Residential-School Compensation For Former Student

    Supreme Court Upholds Residential-School Compensation For Former Student
    OTTAWA — A former residential-school student is entitled to compensation for abuse at the hands of a nun, the Supreme Court of Canada says in a decision that helps clarify the scope of appeals in such cases.

    Supreme Court Upholds Residential-School Compensation For Former Student

    High Court Won't Hear Rapper's Plea Over His Song's Role In Murder Conviction

    High Court Won't Hear Rapper's Plea Over His Song's Role In Murder Conviction
    A murderer won't get a chance to argue in the Supreme Court that his conviction should be overturned because a rap lyric he wrote was improperly allowed into evidence.

    High Court Won't Hear Rapper's Plea Over His Song's Role In Murder Conviction

    Court Hears Religious Doctrine Emphasized Obedience To Men In Child Bride Case

    Court Hears Religious Doctrine Emphasized Obedience To Men In Child Bride Case
    They testified Thursday in Cranbrook, B.C., for the Crown in the case against James Marion Oler, a former leader of a Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints community in Bountiful, B.C.

    Court Hears Religious Doctrine Emphasized Obedience To Men In Child Bride Case

    Thieves Make Off With Popular Tourist Attraction From Peggy's Cove

    One of the most-photographed Nova Scotians is missing.

    Thieves Make Off With Popular Tourist Attraction From Peggy's Cove