Mother that Canada refused to repatriate has died in Turkey, lawyer says - Action News
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Mother that Canada refused to repatriate has died in Turkey, lawyer says

A Canadian mother of sixwho was deemed a security risk and refused permission to come home by the federal government has died suddenlyinTurkey, saysher lawyer.

Woman died after being acquitted of criminal charges abroad, lawyer says

six children holding a sign
The six children of a Canadian woman who died in Turkey, according to her lawyer Lawrence Greenspon. The children are seen holding a sign thanking Greenspon for his efforts to get the Canadian government to repatriate them to Canada. (Submitted by Lawrence Greenspon)

A Canadian mother of sixwho was deemed a security risk and refused permission to come home by the federal government has died suddenlyinTurkey,her lawyer says.

Lawrence Greensponsaidhe's been toldhis clientwas found dead in a cell in a Turkish immigration centre sometime during the night of Oct. 16-17.

The 40-year-old woman, known publicly by her initials F.J.,was trying to get herself home to Canada and had somehow managed toescapeadetention camp in northeastern Syria for ISIS suspects and their families, Greenspon said.

"This was a wholly unnecessary tragedy that occurred," hetold CBC News. "I have no doubt it's the end result of an incredibly un-humanitarian policy byGlobal Affairs Canada.

"I have no doubt that if she had been repatriated with her children that she would still be alive today."

WATCH | Lawyer says woman's death was'unnecessary':

Canadian mother of 6 denied repatriation has died in Turkey, lawyer says

4 days ago
Duration 2:45
A Canadian mother of six known publicly by her initials F.J. has died in Turkey after escaping a Syrian detainment camp for ISIS suspects and their families, says her lawyer Lawrence Greenspon. Ottawa had repatriated her four boys and two girls, but refused to bring her home after deeming her a security risk.

Global Affairsdid not respond to that claim, but did sayCanadian officials are in contact with local authorities and can't share more information due to privacy concerns.

Two other Canadian lawyers and a senator have senta letter to Foreign Affairs MinisterMlanie Jolyaskingthe federal government to call for an independent investigation into a death they say has given rise "to a number of troubling questions."

In May, the federal government repatriated the woman's four boys and two girls from al-Rojin northeastern Syria, where F.J. had been held for five years.

She wasn't allowed to join her children on the repatriation flight to Canada, Greenspon said, because the federal government said it didn't have the "ability to manage her behaviour once she gets back to Canada."

Greenspon said he had been challenging the government's refusal to repatriate the womanthrough a judicial review in Federal Court. He arguedthat Ottawa had not presented "a genuine excuse for not bringing her home" since eight other women had been repatriated from the same camp in al-Roj, and some had been managed through terrorism peace bonds.

"So for GAC to say she's a security risk and we can't manage her behaviour is nonsense," he said.

Former CSIS analyst Phil Gurski disagrees. Hesaid the federal government has to task about 40 people tomanage a potential threatthrough online monitoring, surveillanceand intelligence from allies.

"So the more people we repatriate means a real strain on resources for the RCMP and CSIS," he said.

Gurski said the fact the government chose not to repatriate this personsuggests to him thatCSIS or the RCMP had information indicating she could have been capable ofcarrying out an attack in Canada, orwas radicalized andcould influence people here.

Greenspon said he is not aware of any such allegations against his client.

WATCH |Ottawa to repatriate19 women and children held in Syria:

Ottawa to repatriate 19 women and children held in Syria, lawyer says

2 years ago
Duration 2:02
The federal government has agreed to repatriate 19 Canadian women and children held in Syrian detention camps for suspected ISIS members and their families.

That judicial review ended, Greenspon said, when the woman escaped the campand fled to Turkey in an attempt to obtainemergency travel documents andget back to Canada.

Greenspon said F.J. was arrested in Turkey in June and charged with being a member of a terrorism group. He said she was acquittedin a criminal hearing on Oct. 15 in Turkey andwas transferred to an immigration holding centre, where she was later found dead.

"It makes no sense at all that after a successful trial result on the 15th, thatshe'sdead within 48 hours of that decision. It makes no sense at all," said Greenspon, who is calling for an autopsy.

CBC News is not naming F.J. to protect the identity of her six children, all ofwhom are minors livingwith a foster family in Quebec. CTV News first reported her death. The woman's childrenand her mother in Tunisia have been notified, Greenspon said.

International human rights lawyer Alex Neve called her death "absolutely heartbreaking."

WATCH |The Canadian mothers inside an ISIS detention camp:

The Canadian mothers inside an ISIS detention camp

4 years ago
Duration 2:10
As word spreads in the al-Roj Syrian detention camp for families of ISIS fighters that a four-year-old Canadian girl was freed, other mothers grapple with sending their own children to safety. Some say they couldn't survive without them, while others beg Canada to bring them to safety.

"To know that those six children have now forever been robbed of their mother, who was obviously an essential person in their lives, and to also know at the same time that this could have been avoided," saidNeve, an adjunct professor at the University of Ottawa and Dalhousie University.

Neve was part ofa delegation that travelled to al-Roj in August 2023 and met with F.J. and her children.The delegation was "struck at the time,"Neve said, by how close the children were with each other and with their mother.

He has called on the government to repatriate all Canadians detained in northeastern Syria.He said that if there's evidence againstthose detained, they should be charged and tried in Canada, not exiled abroad.

Neve said there are now serious questions about F.J.'sdeath. He and Sen. Kim Pate are calling for an independent investigation.

The letter says they were told F.J. was having trouble sleeping and was being given "a sedative and other medication to help with that problem," and that her lawyer in Turkey was the one who found her body.

The letter's authorsalso said theywere told by Turkish officials that they had concluded the cause of her death was a heart attack, but they didn't believe an autopsy had been conducted. The letter said F.J. recently had surgery for anal fissures in Turkey, but those who visited the prison said there was no indication she was in poor health.

"Suddenly a 40-year-old otherwise healthy woman suddenly dies unexpectedlyfrom a heart attack in the middle of the night. That's concerning," Nevesaid.

CBC News asked Joly's office and Global Affairs Canada if they would support an investigation but hasnot yet received an answer.

Gurski said Canadians who went to Syria and joined ISISshould not be treated as victims because it's a"heinous terrorist group that engaged in mass rapes, killingsand beheadings."

"The only victims are the people who suffered under the ISIS regime during the so-called caliphate," he said. "The victims of ISIS are in Iraq and Syria, including the Yazidis whom ISIS wanted to eliminate in totality."

WATCH |Yazidis 'heartbroken' over pending repatriation of suspected ISIS members:

Yazidis 'heartbroken' over pending repatriation of suspected ISIS members

2 years ago
Duration 2:47
Survivors of the Yazidi genocide, one of the worst atrocities of the 21st century at the hands of the Islamic State, say they feel heartbroken over Ottawas decision to repatriate Canadians held in Syrian detention camps for suspected ISIS members and their families.

Corrections

  • This story originally said the letter sent to the minister of foreign affairs called for an investigation by the RCMP or consular services staff. In fact, it called for an independent investigation.
    Oct 25, 2024 7:20 PM ET