Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Court Dismisses Latest Helmut Oberlander Effort To Fight Stripping Of Citizenship

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Apr, 2019 08:31 PM

    TORONTO — A 95-year-old man who has had his citizenship revoked several times for lying about his membership in a Second World War Nazi death squad has lost yet another bid to have his case revisited.


    The Federal Court of Appeal dismissed the latest legal action from Helmut Oberlander, whose case dates back to the 1990s.


    Courts have repeatedly ruled that Oberlander's Canadian citizenship should be revoked on the grounds that he lied about his participation in a Nazi squad responsible for the deaths of nearly 100,000 people, although there has never been any evidence that he took part in atrocities.


    The latest ruling had come from Federal Court Judge Michael Phelan last September, but Oberlander alleged the judge was biased because of previous involvement in the case and took the matter to the higher court.


    A three-judge panel with the Federal Court of Appeal dismissed Oberlander's motion to have his case revisited in a written decision released Thursday.


    "There is a strong presumption that judges will comply with their solemn judicial oath to administer justice impartially," the decision reads.


    "This presumption is not easily rebutted, particularly where the previous decision in question which forms the foundation of the bias allegation took place a decade ago, under a different legal regime, and on a different record."


    In June 2017, the federal government revoked Oberlander's Canadian citizenship for the fourth time since the mid 1990s. In doing so, the government maintained he was complicit in war crimes by belonging to Einsatzkommando 10a, known as Ek-10a.


    The Ukraine-born Oberlander, who came to Canada in 1954 and became a citizen in 1960, has long argued he was conscripted into the unit as a 17-year-old and risked execution had he tried to leave. He has insisted he acted as an interpreter and took no part in its savagery.


    Phelan was asked to rule on the government's citizenship revocation decision in September 2018. He found it reasonable to strip Oberlander of his Canadian citizenship for misrepresenting his war-time activities when he immigrated.


    In reaching his conclusion, Phelan said a 2000 ruling from Federal Court Judge Andrew MacKay found Oberlander to have been aware of the unit's brutality and complicit in its war crimes by acting as an interpreter.


    However, Oberlander's lawyers Ronald Poulton and Barbara Jackman argued that Phelan misinterpreted MacKay's decision and was in fact leaning on his own previous ruling from 2008 — one that was upended on appeal.


    "Justice Phelan sat in judgment on his own previous finding," the lawyers argued.


    The Federal Court of Appeal said judges frequently need to revisit their own work, adding that the lengthy amount of time that had elapsed between Phelan's two rulings was relevant.


    The judges also noted that Phelan had to rely on different legal procedures in his two rulings, since the Supreme Court had changed the test for war crimes complicity in 2013.


    "The Supreme Court changed the test ... from participation or indirect complicity to complicity based on a knowing, significant, and voluntary contribution," the decision reads. "The judicial review before Phelan in 2018 involved a different legal test than that which governed in 2008."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    One Year Later: Survivors In Broncos Crash Continue To Heal From Injuries

    The 13 players who survived the Humboldt Broncos bus crash one year ago are dealing with injuries ranging from paralysis and back pain to brain damage and mental-health issues

    One Year Later: Survivors In Broncos Crash Continue To Heal From Injuries

    Two Dead After Overnight Calgary Shooting Police Say Was Not Random

    Two Dead After Overnight Calgary Shooting Police Say Was Not Random
    Police say one man died at the scene and the second person died in hospital.

    Two Dead After Overnight Calgary Shooting Police Say Was Not Random

    'We Are Hockey' Unveiled At Sikh Heritage Museum In Abbotsford

    This exhibit offers visitors a chance to see the pioneers of minorities in hockey as they follow the timeline to the present day where players of Punjabi descent and other minorities are starting to break through into the professional leagues. 

    'We Are Hockey' Unveiled At Sikh Heritage Museum In Abbotsford

    EDC Investigating Claim It Backed SNC-Lavalin On Corrupt Angola Dam Contract

    EDC Investigating Claim It Backed SNC-Lavalin On Corrupt Angola Dam Contract
    Export Development Canada says it's reviewing support it gave to SNC-Lavalin after learning of an allegation the agency backed the company on a dam project in Angola that it won corruptly.  

    EDC Investigating Claim It Backed SNC-Lavalin On Corrupt Angola Dam Contract

    Freeland Say Lifting U.S. Tariffs Is Part Of Ratification Of The New NAFTA

    OTTAWA — Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland is linking the lifting of "absurd" U.S. tariffs on Canadian and Mexican steel to the ratification of the new North American free-trade deal.

    Freeland Say Lifting U.S. Tariffs Is Part Of Ratification Of The New NAFTA

    Sikh Heritage Month launches in B.C.

    Sikh Heritage Month BC has launched a series of public awareness videos and premiere arts event – The Revival - to showcase the thriving arts and culture scene among Sikh youth in BC

    Sikh Heritage Month launches in B.C.