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That's the amount Maher Arar is suing the Canadian government for. He says hes doing this because the Canadian government breached his charter of rights.
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All this just after his wife won the Ottawa NDP nomination.
- Maher Arar and his family are suing the Canadian government for $400-million, according to the National Post.
The suit claims authorities breached Arar's charter rights and were guilty of racism when they pursued an investigation into his alleged extremist links in 2002.
The court filing contains several allegations, including negligence, negligent investigation, defamation, false imprisonment, assault and abuse of public office.
Other parties named in the suit include CSIS, the RCMP and Foreign Affairs department officials in Syria and in New York.
The family says the authorities employed illegal and unconstitutional means to conduct a biased investigation on the basis of unreliable information.
A Syrian-born Canadian citizen, Arar is seeking $50 million in damages and $20 million in punitive damages, as well as unspecified special damages, interest and costs, the newspaper reported. Eleven family members including his wife, Monia Mazigh, are seeking $30 million each in damages.
Mazigh is running in the next federal election for the New Democrats in the riding of Ottawa South.
U.S. authorities in New York arrested Arar, 34, in September 2002 while he was returning home from a trip to Tunisia. He was deported to Syria, where he says he was tortured.
He has denied being a terrorist and he has not been charged with any crime. After being released, he returned to Canada and, together with his wife, successfully campaigned for an inquiry.
An official inquiry beginning in June will examine Arar's claims that he was deported from the United States to Syria with the collusion of Canada's security services.
He has already filed a lawsuit against top U.S. officials, saying they knew he was facing torture in Syria.
web page
All this just after his wife won the Ottawa NDP nomination.
- Maher Arar and his family are suing the Canadian government for $400-million, according to the National Post.
The suit claims authorities breached Arar's charter rights and were guilty of racism when they pursued an investigation into his alleged extremist links in 2002.
The court filing contains several allegations, including negligence, negligent investigation, defamation, false imprisonment, assault and abuse of public office.
Other parties named in the suit include CSIS, the RCMP and Foreign Affairs department officials in Syria and in New York.
The family says the authorities employed illegal and unconstitutional means to conduct a biased investigation on the basis of unreliable information.
A Syrian-born Canadian citizen, Arar is seeking $50 million in damages and $20 million in punitive damages, as well as unspecified special damages, interest and costs, the newspaper reported. Eleven family members including his wife, Monia Mazigh, are seeking $30 million each in damages.
Mazigh is running in the next federal election for the New Democrats in the riding of Ottawa South.
U.S. authorities in New York arrested Arar, 34, in September 2002 while he was returning home from a trip to Tunisia. He was deported to Syria, where he says he was tortured.
He has denied being a terrorist and he has not been charged with any crime. After being released, he returned to Canada and, together with his wife, successfully campaigned for an inquiry.
An official inquiry beginning in June will examine Arar's claims that he was deported from the United States to Syria with the collusion of Canada's security services.
He has already filed a lawsuit against top U.S. officials, saying they knew he was facing torture in Syria.