The son of a Montreal photojournalist who died after allegedly being
sexually assaulted and tortured by Iranian authorities will ask the
Supreme Court of Canada on Tuesday for permission to sue the Iranian
government and its officials.
Zahra Kazemi, a dual citizen of Iran
and Canada, was covering protests in front of the notorious Evin prison
in Tehran in 2003 when she was arrested. Two days later the 54-year-old
was in a coma after suffering a brain hemorrhage. Iran acknowledged she
was beaten, but no one has ever been convicted in her death.
For her son Stephan Hashemi of Montreal, now in his mid-30s, “it’s
about some form of justice,” his lawyer, Mathieu Bouchard, said in an
interview. Although Mr. Hashemi is unlikely to collect any damages from
Iran in the $17-million lawsuit, Mr. Bouchard said that’s not the point.
“The
point is to have an official recognition by an independent court of
what happened, and the damage it caused, to his mother and to him. He
suffered tremendously as a result of those events. He’s still
suffering.”
Federal law in Canada expressly grants foreign states
immunity from being sued, and the Canadian government argues that, if
Mr. Hashemi is permitted to sue Iran, Canada could lose its immunity
abroad, and its relationships with other countries would suffer. But Mr.
Bouchard quotes a British judge’s reaction to a similar argument: “I’m
not impressed by arguments based on the practical undesirability of
upsetting foreign regimes which may resort to torture.”
Even so,
Mr. Bouchard acknowledges that allowing the lawsuit to go ahead would
set Canada apart from other nations. A Quebec judge dismissed Mr.
Hashemi’s suit because of the federal law on immunity, a decision upheld
by that province’s highest court. Ontario’s top court threw out a
lawsuit in 2004 for similar reasons, in another torture case involving
Iran. And courts in Britain and New Zealand have come to similar
decisions. But Mr. Bouchard argues that the Supreme Court has the legal
tools to put Canada at the forefront of international human rights law.
The United Nations’ Convention Against Torture requires that nations
allow for legal redress in cases of torture; the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms protects security of the person from breaches of
fundamental justice (Mr. Bouchard argues that Mr. Hashemi’s suffering at
being denied legal accountability violates his security); and the
rarely used 1960 Bill of Rights protects the right to a fair process.
He
says suing in Iran is impossible, and taking action against Iran in
other forums is also impossible because Iran is not a party to the
Convention Against Torture, and does not recognize the jurisdiction of
the International Court of Justice.
“We have some very solid
foundations for this. We’re saying that in the case of torture, when the
foreign state does not afford any way for redress, then Canada should
take jurisdiction.”
He added, “Torture is probably the worst form
of human rights breach that we can deal with, on a par with genocide and
slavery. There aren’t a lot of crimes of that nature around. These
three are of a special nature and require special treatment.”
Iran
will not be sending a lawyer to present arguments. The Supreme Court
has appointed Toronto constitutional specialist Christopher Bredt to
ensure that all arguments that Iran might make are heard. He will argue
that the 1987 Convention Against Torture obliges Canada only to permit
lawsuits over torture committed within its borders.
Several rights
groups, including the Canadian Association of Refugee Lawyers, will
back Mr. Hashemi’s case and argue that the court should permit the
lawsuit to go ahead.
Link:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/son-of-photojournalist-
to-ask-supreme-court-for-right-to-sue-iran-over-her-death/article17537514/
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