Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Federal Court Opens Door For Former KGB Employee To Rejoin Family In Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Jan, 2016 12:41 PM
    VANCOUVER — The federal Liberal government may be setting a new tone within the immigration department, clearing a path to reunite a former Russian KGB translator with his family in Canada, says his lawyer.
     
    Mikhail Lennikov, 55, voluntarily left six years of church sanctuary in Vancouver just months before a Federal Court overturned his failed application for permanent residence on humanitarian and compassionate grounds.
     
    The court decision, publicly released on Dec. 22, directs the application be reviewed by a different immigration officer.
     
    His lawyer, Hadayt Nazami, said he hopes the order will be returned in Lennikov's favour now that the political climate has shifted with the replacement of the Conservative government.
     
    "Basically all the doors were shut, completely shut. And now you can see a door opening slightly and that's significant," Nazami said of the decision.
     
    He said if there are no "systemic biases" or an "invisible will" to influence the decision, then there's no reason immigration officers should feel prevented from deciding his client's case.  
     
    Lennikov claimed refuge in Vancouver's First Lutheran Church in June 2009, but departed on his own accord last August after negotiations with the Canada Border Services Agency.
     
    He left behind his wife and adult son, who are now Canadian citizens, after the isolation likely became unbearable, Nazami said.
     
    "It's extra difficult for someone like him when he knows that the entire system is against him — it was at the time," he said.
     
    "When you're already pressed down so hard, it's not easy to stay positive forever."
     
    Lennikov was ordered deported in May 2006, based on accusations he had worked as a spy for the notorious Soviet security service. But expert evidence in immigration hearings later found he was coerced into his five years of KGB employment — and that his work never involved espionage.
     
    The recent Federal Court ruling was the first positive judicial decision for Lennikov in a series of legal challenges to stay in Canada, said Nazami. The man had initially moved to British Columbia on a student visa in September 1997.
     
    Judge Elizabeth Heneghan granted the judicial review after determining that the immigration officer who denied Lennikov's permanent residence application had erred. She found the officer had analyzed Lennikov's inadmissability after an early decision had already made a determination on the issue.
     
    But Heneghan went further than was required in her ruling, raising concerns with how the officer dealt with other elements of the humanitarian and compassionate application.
     
    "I refer to the treatment of the applicant's affidavit, the consideration of the effect of the applicant claiming sanctuary and the effect of a potential separation on the applicant's wife," Heneghan wrote.
     
    It's unclear how long Lennikov could wait before a new decision on his case is made.
     
    Nazami said he believes his client is currently teaching English in Russia.
     
    If a decision is made in Lennikov's favour, he plans to return to Canada, Nazami said.
     
    The lawyer hopes the case is decided quickly, and pointed to the recent and sudden decision on another long-outstanding case by the new government.
     
    Immigration Minister John McCallum granted ministerial relief on Dec. 21 to Jose Figueroa, who had been living in sanctuary in a church in Langley, B.C., to avoid deportation.
     
    Figueroa, a Salvadoran who had lived with his family in Canada for 18 years, was granted an exemption to remain on humanitarian and compassionate grounds after living in the church for two years.
     
    "The tone the minister sets ... it's actually very carefully observed by the decision-makers. They make decisions for him and on his behalf," Nazami said.
     
    "The staff and immigration officers have not changed, but the minister has changed. At least we know no one will get into trouble if they make a positive decision."
     
    Lennikov also asked for the minister to grant him relief, allowing him to stay in Canada. He's been waiting for that decision for four years.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto Cop Taken To Hospital After Bite From Sick Raccoon

    Toronto Cop Taken To Hospital After Bite From Sick Raccoon
    Const. Allyson Douglas-Cook says police received a call about a raccoon that appeared to be blind and hanging around a downtown store Monday.

    Toronto Cop Taken To Hospital After Bite From Sick Raccoon

    Environment Canada Ends Winter Storm Watch For Southern Ontario

    Environment Canada Ends Winter Storm Watch For Southern Ontario
    Environment Canada has issued winter storm and freezing rain warnings for large swaths of Ontario and southern Quebec after an unseasonably warm December.

    Environment Canada Ends Winter Storm Watch For Southern Ontario

    In Bid For Better Ties, South Korea And Japan Reach Landmark Deal On Wartime Korean Sex Slaves

    In Bid For Better Ties, South Korea And Japan Reach Landmark Deal On Wartime Korean Sex Slaves
     It represents a shift for Tokyo's conservative government and a new willingness to compromise by previously wary Seoul.

    In Bid For Better Ties, South Korea And Japan Reach Landmark Deal On Wartime Korean Sex Slaves

    Canada-Wide Warrants Issued For Man, Woman Sought In 'Extremely Violent' Murder In Moncton, N.B.

    Canada-Wide Warrants Issued For Man, Woman Sought In 'Extremely Violent' Murder In Moncton, N.B.
    Eighteen-year-old Tyler Noel and 20-year-old Marissa Shephard, both of the Moncton area, face charges of first-degree murder and arson in the Dec. 17 death of Baylee Wylie

    Canada-Wide Warrants Issued For Man, Woman Sought In 'Extremely Violent' Murder In Moncton, N.B.

    Greater Victoria Sees Eight Suspected Drug Overdose Deaths In One Week

    Greater Victoria Sees Eight Suspected Drug Overdose Deaths In One Week
    Coroner Barb McClintock says five men and three women have died of suspected overdoses in several communities, including Saanich, Langford and Sooke, between Dec. 20 and 26.

    Greater Victoria Sees Eight Suspected Drug Overdose Deaths In One Week

    Indian-Origin Politician Harjinder Singh Starts Own Political Party In UK After Fall Out With UKIP

    Indian-Origin Politician Harjinder Singh Starts Own Political Party In UK After Fall Out With UKIP
    Harjinder Singh, a former UK Independence Party (UKIP) candidate for Birmingham's Perry Barr constituency, has set up the Open Borders Party as he disagrees vehemently with his former Eurosceptic party's immigration policy

    Indian-Origin Politician Harjinder Singh Starts Own Political Party In UK After Fall Out With UKIP