Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Hospitalized Halifax Woman Facing Deportation Has Shackles Removed

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Sep, 2016 12:11 PM
    HALIFAX — An ailing woman who is facing deportation to England has been freed from shackles that kept her restrained in her hospital bed following the intervention of two Nova Scotia cabinet ministers, one of whom said he was appalled by her treatment.
     
    Health Minister Leo Glavine said Thursday he thought restraining Fliss Cramman was "very inappropriate," and had discussed the issue with provincial Justice Minister Diana Whalen.
     
    "When I have a view of a person chained to a bed, it brings back the 19th century not the 21st," Glavine told reporters.
     
    Cramman, who has been in the country since she was eight years old but is not a Canadian citizen, has undergone a series of surgeries after being rushed to hospital from a prison facility in Dartmouth, N.S., last month.
     
    The Canada Border Services Agency wants to deport her by Nov. 4, but her doctor told a hearing last week that she has addiction and mental health issues and shouldn't be removed from the country while she recovers from surgery for a perforated colon.
     
    "I'm very appalled that circumstance would exist today, especially in light of the fact that there is already security in that room," Glavine said.
     
    Whalen said the case also concerned her, prompting her to order a review of the guidelines for dealing with prisoners who are kept in a hospital setting. As a result, she ordered the restraints be removed Thursday morning.
     
    She said provincial corrections officials were acting on behalf of the Canada Border Services Agency, which wanted Cramman restrained in her room at the Dartmouth General as a potential flight risk.
     
    "I thought it was too much and I thought it should be reviewed," said Whalen. "The protocol is two guards are there, so I felt that was probably sufficient."
     
    A justice official said Friday the provincial corrections officials actually applied the shackles in keeping with their policy while carrying out a detention order for the Canada Border Services Agency.
     
    Whalen said while a prisoner who is transferred to a hospital can be restrained, there needs to be a quick assessment of the risk they pose.
     
    "It does concern me that somebody who is seriously ill would be restrained," Whalen said.
     
    Darlene MacEachern, executive director of the Elizabeth Fry Society in Cape Breton, has been lobbying to have the restraints removed and have Cramman taken off a detention list and placed in her group's care. She is also pressing the federal government to grant Cramman some form of citizenship on compassionate and humanitarian grounds.
     
    She said she was pleased that the 33-year-old mother of four young children was released from the shackles. 
     
    "We're commending a lot of them for seeing the light and removing them," she said.
     
    John McCallum, federal minister of immigration, refugees and citizenship, said he couldn't discuss the specific case but suggested his office is looking into the matter.
     
    "I'm not allowed under the privacy laws to comment on any individual cases, but you can be assured we are looking at all such cases," he said in Ottawa. "There are many cases where we have halted deportations, my colleague Ralph Goodale and me, for various reasons of that kind, but I cannot talk about individual cases."
     
    Emma Halpern, a lawyer with the society, said she saw Cramman in her hospital room earlier Thursday and the two discussed the possibility that the restraints would be removed. She said Cramman remained "very sick," but was focusing on recovering from at least two surgeries and an infection.
     
    "I'm sure she's pleased," Halpern said. "She indicated it was a great discomfort....She told me she is doing her best to get healthy."
     
    Following a 45-minute hearing last Friday, an adjudicator with the Immigration and Refugee Board agreed that Cramman would not be able to travel for at least a couple of months.
     
    Her case ended up before the board after Cramman was convicted of offering to traffic heroin a couple of years ago. After serving two-thirds of her sentence she was detained by federal officials after they began looking into the issues around her citizenship.
     
    A decision on whether to release her from the list is expected to be made when Cramman's case goes before the board again on Oct. 21.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ministers, PMO Staffers Get $1.1 Million In Expenses For Relocating To Ottawa

    Ministers, PMO Staffers Get $1.1 Million In Expenses For Relocating To Ottawa
    Taxpayers forked out $1.1 million to move some four dozen political staffers to Ottawa after Justin Trudeau's Liberals won power last fall.

    Ministers, PMO Staffers Get $1.1 Million In Expenses For Relocating To Ottawa

    Suspect Being Sought After Deaths Of Two People In Calgary Shooting

    A man and his common-law wife are dead after what police believe was a targeted, gang-related shooting in Calgary.

    Suspect Being Sought After Deaths Of Two People In Calgary Shooting

    Donald Trump As President Can Work With Canada Despite Trudeau Comments: Steve Forbes

    Donald Trump As President Can Work With Canada Despite Trudeau Comments: Steve Forbes
    Hours before the editor-in-chief of Forbes business magazine spoke to a conference of Quebec financiers in Montreal, Trudeau told the UN General Assembly in New York to reject politicians who exploit people's fears and anxieties.

    Donald Trump As President Can Work With Canada Despite Trudeau Comments: Steve Forbes

    Prince William's Visit To B.C. Draws Memories Of Frenzied 1998 Trip

    Prince William's Visit To B.C. Draws Memories Of Frenzied 1998 Trip
    It was March 24, 1998, and hundreds of teenage girls were crammed behind barriers outside a suburban Vancouver high school. The girls weren't squealing for the Backstreet Boys or Leonardo DiCaprio — they were there to see a real-life prince.

    Prince William's Visit To B.C. Draws Memories Of Frenzied 1998 Trip

    Labour Minister Expects 'changes' To Deal With RCMP Harassment

    Labour Minister Expects 'changes' To Deal With RCMP Harassment
    Labour Minister MaryAnn Mihychuk says she expects to "see changes" flow from a legislative review concerning harassment issues within the RCMP after hearing from a disgruntled female Mountie.

    Labour Minister Expects 'changes' To Deal With RCMP Harassment

    DNA Tests Confirm Second Switched-At-Birth Case In Northern Manitoba

    DNA Tests Confirm Second Switched-At-Birth Case In Northern Manitoba
    NORWAY HOUSE, Man. — A second set of DNA tests have confirmed that two men were switched at birth at a hospital in northern Manitoba in 1975.

    DNA Tests Confirm Second Switched-At-Birth Case In Northern Manitoba