Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Friday, July 28, 2006
Nun Loses In Seeking Canadian Refuge Under Legal Technicality
In Canada, a Nigerian nun who claims that she will suffer religious persecution if she is returned home has come up with an interesting legal maneuver to obtain refugee status. Yesterday's Canadian Press reports that Sister Nkemhurunaya Juliana Eligwe has been helping people of the Sandy Bay Ojibway First Nation, on the shore of Lake Manitoba, for more than two years. After immigration officials rejected her asylum request, the Ojibways made her an honorary member of their band. Then she claimed that she is protected under Canada's Immigration and Refugee Protection Act that provides that "every person registered as an Indian under the Indian Act has the right to enter into and remain in Canada." However, on July 19, Federal Court Judge Sean Harrington refused to block her deportation. While his decision rested on various procedural issues, he wrote: "The proposition put forward, if brought to its extreme, is that each and every band . . . has the power to usurp the discretion of the minister of citizenship and immigration by accepting non-residents as band members and thereby granting them permanent resident status." The case is Sandy Bay Ojibway First Nation v. Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, 2006 FC 903 (Fed. Ct., July 19, 2006). The decision may be appealed.