Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ottawa Intervenes, Allows Woman Facing Deportation To Remain In Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Nov, 2016 12:35 PM
    HALIFAX — A 33-year-old mother of four who was facing deportation will be allowed to stay in Canada, her lawyer says.
     
    Fliss Cramman was due to be deported to her native Britain as early as Dec. 16 after a drug conviction. She has lived in Canada since she was eight years old, but her parents and other guardians failed to obtain her citizenship.
     
    In a press release Friday, the Women's Legal Education and Action Fund said Immigration Minister John McCallum had intervened, and ordered her released from border services custody and her deportation stayed. The group said he ordered her permanent residency status "reinstated in principle."
     
    Her lawyer, John O'Neill, confirmed federal authorities have told him Cramman can stay in Canada.
     
    "I am overwhelmed," Cramman said in the release. "I am thankful I was able to get my story out and that the right people heard it. I am happy and relieved. I want to say thanks to the government for caring about me."
     
    Cramman will move from Dartmouth General Hospital, where she has been recovering from colon surgery, to an Elizabeth Fry Society halfway house in Cape Breton.
     
    "We want to thank government for doing the right thing; for taking a stand for vulnerable women," Emma Halpern, a lawyer with the Elizabeth Fry Society of Cape Breton, said in the release.
     
    Cramman was convicted in 2014 of offering to traffic heroin, sentenced to 27 months in prison and detained again when the Canada Border Services Agency looked into her citizenship.
     
    A hearing had been scheduled for noon Friday in Dartmouth, with advocates expecting to present a plan to provide health care for her.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Judge Asked To Stop Probe Into Suspended Police Chief Over Social-Media Conduct

    Judge Asked To Stop Probe Into Suspended Police Chief Over Social-Media Conduct
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia Supreme Court judge is being asked to stop an external investigation into inappropriate online messages that Victoria's suspended police chief sent to the wife of one of his officers.

    Judge Asked To Stop Probe Into Suspended Police Chief Over Social-Media Conduct

    Delta Police Take To The Streets During The Holiday Season

    The Delta Police continue to make road safety a priority and are taking to the streets conducting counter attack roadblocks over the next several weeks as we come into the Holiday Season.

    Delta Police Take To The Streets During The Holiday Season

    Celebrating Multiculturalism Week In British Columbia

    Celebrating Multiculturalism Week In British Columbia
      The most ethnically diverse province in Canada, B.C. welcomes nearly 40,000 new immigrants every year. The cultural diversity this creates plays a vital role in the development of a strong and vibrant social and economic future for the province. 

    Celebrating Multiculturalism Week In British Columbia

    Appeal Denied For Man Who Tortured, Maimed, Starved And Assaulted Roommate

    Appeal Denied For Man Who Tortured, Maimed, Starved And Assaulted Roommate
    CALGARY — Alberta's top court has upheld the conviction of a man who tortured and starved his roommate and business partner before dropping him off near death at a hospital.

    Appeal Denied For Man Who Tortured, Maimed, Starved And Assaulted Roommate

    'It's A Betrayal:' Former Calgary Police Officer Charged With Kidnapping

    'It's A Betrayal:' Former Calgary Police Officer Charged With Kidnapping
    CALGARY — A former police officer is facing 11 criminal code charges that include kidnapping and obstruction of justice.

    'It's A Betrayal:' Former Calgary Police Officer Charged With Kidnapping

    Like Mother, Like Cub: Researchers Say Grizzlies Learn Bad Behaviour From Moms

    Like Mother, Like Cub: Researchers Say Grizzlies Learn Bad Behaviour From Moms
    EDMONTON — When it comes to bad behaviour in grizzly bears, new research blames the moms.

    Like Mother, Like Cub: Researchers Say Grizzlies Learn Bad Behaviour From Moms