SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Adil Charkaoui
Appellant
and
Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration and
Minister
of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness
Respondents
‑ and ‑
Attorney
General of Ontario, Amnesty International,
British
Columbia Civil Liberties Association, Canadian
Bar Association,
Canadian
Civil Liberties Association, Canadian Council for Refugees,
African
Canadian Legal Clinic, International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group,
National
Anti‑Racism Council of Canada, Canadian Arab Federation,
Canadian
Council on American‑Islamic Relations, Canadian Muslim Civil
Liberties
Association, Criminal Lawyers’ Association
(Ontario),
Federation of Law Societies of Canada,
University
of Toronto, Faculty of Law — International
Human
Rights Clinic and Human Rights Watch
Interveners
and between:
Hassan Almrei
Appellant
and
Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration and
Minister
of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness
Respondents
‑ and ‑
Attorney
General of Ontario, Amnesty International,
British
Columbia Civil Liberties Association, Canadian Bar Association,
Canadian
Civil Liberties Association, Canadian Council for Refugees,
African
Canadian Legal Clinic, International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group,
National
Anti‑Racism Council of Canada, Canadian Council on American‑Islamic
Relations,
Canadian Muslim Civil Liberties Association,
Criminal
Lawyers’ Association (Ontario), Federation of Law Societies of Canada,
University
of Toronto, Faculty of Law — International
Human
Rights Clinic and Human Rights Watch
Interveners
and between:
Mohamed Harkat
Appellant
and
Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration, Minister of
Public
Safety and Emergency Preparedness and
Attorney
General of Canada
Respondents
‑ and ‑
Attorney
General of Ontario, Amnesty International,
British
Columbia Civil Liberties Association, Canadian
Bar Association,
Canadian
Civil Liberties Association, Canadian Council for Refugees,
African
Canadian Legal Clinic, International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group,
National
Anti‑Racism Council of Canada, Canadian Council on American‑Islamic
Relations,
Canadian Muslim Civil Liberties Association,
Criminal
Lawyers’ Association (Ontario), Federation of Law Societies of Canada,
University
of Toronto, Faculty of Law — International
Human
Rights Clinic and Human Rights Watch
Interveners
Coram:
McLachlin C.J. and Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron
and Rothstein JJ.
Reasons for
Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 143)
|
McLachlin C.J. (Bastarache,
Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron and Rothstein JJ. concurring)
|
______________________________
Charkaoui v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), [2007] 1
S.C.R. 350, 2007 SCC 9
Adil Charkaoui Appellant
v.
Minister of Citizenship and Immigration and
Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Respondents
and
Attorney General of Ontario, Amnesty International,
British Columbia Civil Liberties Association, Canadian
Bar Association, Canadian Civil Liberties Association,
Canadian Council for Refugees, African Canadian
Legal Clinic, International Civil Liberties Monitoring
Group, National Anti‑Racism Council of Canada,
Canadian Arab Federation, Canadian Council on
American‑Islamic Relations, Canadian Muslim Civil
Liberties Association, Criminal Lawyers’ Association
(Ontario), Federation of Law Societies of Canada,
University of Toronto, Faculty of Law — International
Human Rights Clinic, and Human Rights Watch Interveners
‑ and ‑
Hassan Almrei Appellant
v.
Minister of Citizenship and Immigration and
Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Respondents
and
Attorney General of Ontario, Amnesty International,
British Columbia Civil Liberties Association, Canadian
Bar Association, Canadian Civil Liberties Association,
Canadian Council for Refugees, African Canadian Legal
Clinic, International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group,
National Anti‑Racism Council of Canada, Canadian
Council on American‑Islamic Relations, Canadian Muslim
Civil Liberties Association, Criminal Lawyers’ Association
(Ontario), Federation of Law Societies of Canada,
University of Toronto, Faculty of Law — International
Human Rights Clinic, and Human Rights Watch Interveners
‑ and ‑
Mohamed Harkat Appellant
v.
Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, Minister of
Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness, and
Attorney General of Canada Respondents
and
Attorney General of Ontario, Amnesty International,
British Columbia Civil Liberties Association, Canadian
Bar Association, Canadian Civil Liberties Association,
Canadian Council for Refugees, African Canadian Legal
Clinic, International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group,
National Anti‑Racism Council of Canada, Canadian
Council on American‑Islamic Relations, Canadian Muslim
Civil Liberties Association, Criminal Lawyers’ Association
(Ontario), Federation of Law Societies of Canada,
University of Toronto, Faculty of Law — International
Human Rights Clinic, and Human Rights Watch Interveners
Indexed as: Charkaoui v. Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration)
Neutral citation: 2007 SCC 9.
File Nos.: 30762, 30929, 31178.
2006: June 13, 14, 15;
2007: February 23.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel,
Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron and Rothstein JJ.
on appeal from the federal court of appeal
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Right to
life, liberty and security of person — Fundamental justice — Fair hearing —
Immigration — Removal — Permanent resident and foreign nationals detained
following issuance of certificates stating that they are inadmissible to Canada
on grounds of security — Judge reviewing reasonableness of certificate must
ensure confidentiality of information on which certificate is based if
disclosure would be injurious to national security — Named persons in
certificates denied opportunity to known case put against them — Whether named
persons deprived of their right to life, liberty and security of person in
accordance with principles of fundamental justice — If not, whether limit
imposed on named persons’ constitutional right justifiable — Canadian Charter
of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 1 , 7 .
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Arbitrary
detention — Right to prompt review of detention — Immigration — Removal —
Detention of foreign nationals automatic upon issuance of certificate stating
they are inadmissible to Canada on grounds of security — Whether detention
without warrant or lack of review of detention until 120 days after
reasonableness of certificate judicially confirmed infringes guarantee against
arbitrary detention — If so, whether infringement justified — Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 1 , 9 , 10 (c).
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Cruel and
unusual treatment — Fundamental justice — Immigration — Extended period of
detention pending removal — Permanent resident and foreign nationals
detained following issuance of certificates stating that they are inadmissible
to Canada on grounds of security — Immigration legislation permitting
lengthy and indeterminate detention or lengthy periods subject to onerous
release conditions — Whether legislation constitutes cruel and unusual
treatment or is inconsistent with principles of fundamental justice — Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 7 , 12 .
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Right to
equality — Immigration — Removal — Whether deportation scheme applicable
only to non‑citizens infringes equality rights — Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms, s. 15(1) .
Constitutional law — Rule of law — Immigration —
Removal — Permanent resident and foreign nationals detained following issuance
of certificates stating that they are inadmissible to Canada on grounds of
security — Judge’s determination on reasonableness of certificate final —
Whether unavailability of appeal infringes rule of law — Whether rule of law
prohibits automatic detention or detention on basis of executive decision.
Immigration law — Inadmissibility and removal —
Permanent resident and foreign nationals detained following issuance of
certificates stating that they are inadmissible to Canada on grounds of
security — Whether scheme under which certificates issued and detentions
ordered constitutional — Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 1 ,
7 , 9 , 10 (c), 12 , 15 — Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001,
c. 27, ss. 33 , 77 to 85 .
The Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (“IRPA ”)
allows the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration and the Minister of Public
Safety and Emergency Preparedness to issue a certificate declaring that a
foreign national or permanent resident is inadmissible to Canada on grounds of
security, among others (s. 77 ), and leading to the detention of the person
named in the certificate. The certificate and the detention are both subject
to review by a judge of the Federal Court, in a process that may deprive the
person of some or all of the information on the basis of which the certificate
was issued or the detention ordered (s. 78 ). Once a certificate is
issued, a permanent resident may be detained, and the detention must be
reviewed within 48 hours; in the case of a foreign national, the detention
is automatic and that person cannot apply for review until 120 days after
a judge determines the certificate to be reasonable (ss. 82 ‑84).
The judge’s determination on the reasonableness of the certificate cannot be
appealed or judicially reviewed (s. 80(3) ). If the judge finds the
certificate to be reasonable, it becomes a removal order, which cannot be
appealed and which may be immediately enforced (s. 81 ).
Certificates of inadmissibility have been issued by
the Ministers against the appellants C, H and A. While C is a permanent
resident, H and A are foreign nationals who had been recognized as Convention
refugees. All were living in Canada when they were arrested and detained
on the basis of allegations that they constituted a threat to the security of
Canada by reason of involvement in terrorist activities. C and H were
released on conditions in 2005 and 2006 respectively, but A remains in
detention. Both the Federal Court and the Federal Court of Appeal upheld the
constitutional validity of the IRPA ’s certificate scheme.
Held: The
appeals should be allowed.
(1) Procedure
for determining reasonableness of certificate and for review of detention
The procedure under the IRPA for determining
whether a certificate is reasonable and the detention review procedures
infringe s. 7 of the Charter . While the deportation of a non‑citizen
in the immigration context may not in itself engage s. 7 , features
associated with deportation may do so. Here, s. 7 is clearly engaged
because the person named in a certificate faces detention pending the outcome
of the proceedings and because the process may lead to the person’s removal to
a place where his or her life or freedom would be threatened. Further, the IRPA ’s
impairment of the named person’s right to life, liberty and security is not in
accordance with the principles of fundamental justice. The procedure for
determining whether a certificate is reasonable and the detention review
procedure fail to assure the fair hearing that s. 7 requires before the
state deprives a person of this right. [13-14] [17-18] [65]
The right to a fair hearing comprises the right to a
hearing before an independent and impartial magistrate who must decide on the
facts and the law, the right to know the case put against one, and the right to
answer that case. While the IRPA procedures properly reflect the
exigencies of the security context, security concerns cannot be used, at the
s. 7 stage of the analysis, to excuse procedures that do not conform to
fundamental justice. Here, the IRPA scheme includes a hearing and meets
the requirement of independence and impartiality, but the secrecy required by
the scheme denies the person named in a certificate the opportunity to know the
case put against him or her, and hence to challenge the government’s case.
This, in turn, undermines the judge’s ability to come to a decision based on
all the relevant facts and law. The judges of the Federal Court, who are
required under the IRPA to conduct a searching examination of the
reasonableness of the certificate, in an independent and judicial fashion and
on the material placed before them, do not possess the full and independent
powers to gather evidence that exist in an inquisitorial process. At the same
time, the person named in a certificate is not given the disclosure and the
right to participate in the proceedings that characterize the adversarial
process. The result is a concern that the judge, despite his or her best
efforts to get all the relevant evidence, may be obliged, perhaps unknowingly,
to make the required decision based on only part of the relevant evidence.
Similar concerns arise with respect to the requirement that the decision be
based on the law. Without knowledge of the information put against him or her,
the person named in a certificate may not be in a position to raise legal
objections relating to the evidence, or to develop legal arguments based on the
evidence. If s. 7 is to be satisfied, either the person must be given the
necessary information, or a substantial substitute for that information must be
found. The IRPA provides neither. [23] [27‑31] [38] [45] [50‑52]
[61] [65]
The infringement of s. 7 is not saved by
s. 1 of the Charter . While the protection of Canada’s national
security and related intelligence sources constitutes a pressing and
substantial objective, and the non‑disclosure of evidence at certificate
hearings is rationally connected to this objective, the IRPA does not
minimally impair the rights of persons named in certificates. Less intrusive
alternatives developed in Canada and abroad, notably the use of special counsel
to act on behalf of the named persons, illustrate that the government can do
more to protect the individual while keeping critical information confidential
than it has done in the IRPA . [66] [68] [70] [73] [85] [87]
(2) Detention of foreign nationals
The detention of foreign nationals without warrant
does not infringe the guarantee against arbitrary detention in s. 9 of the
Charter . The triggering event for the detention of a foreign national
is the signing under s. 77 of the IRPA of a certificate stating
that the foreign national is inadmissible on grounds of security, violation of
human or international rights, serious criminality or organized criminality.
The security ground is based on the danger posed by the named person, and
therefore provides a rational foundation for the detention. However, the lack
of review of the detention of foreign nationals until 120 days after the
reasonableness of the certificate has been judicially confirmed (s. 84(2) )
infringes the guarantee against arbitrary detention in s. 9 of the Charter ,
which encompasses the right to prompt review of detention under s. 10 (c)
of the Charter . While there may be a need for some flexibility
regarding the period for which a suspected terrorist may be detained, this
cannot justify the complete denial of a timely detention review. [88-89] [91]
[93]
The infringement of ss. 9 and 10 (c) is not
justified under s. 1 of the Charter . The IRPA provides
permanent residents who pose a danger to national security with a mandatory
detention review within 48 hours. It follows that denial of review for
foreign nationals for 120 days after the certificate is confirmed does not
minimally impair the rights guaranteed by ss. 9 and 10 (c). [93-94]
(3) Extended
periods of detention
While the s. 12 guarantee against cruel and
unusual treatment cannot be used as a mechanism to challenge the overall
fairness of a particular legislative regime, indefinite detention without hope
of release or recourse to a legal process to procure release may cause
psychological stress and therefore constitute cruel and unusual treatment. The
IRPA in principle imposes detention only pending deportation, but it may
in fact permit lengthy and indeterminate detention, or lengthy periods of
detention subject to onerous release conditions. The principles of fundamental
justice and the guarantee of freedom from cruel and unusual treatment require
that, where a person is detained or is subject to onerous conditions of release
for an extended period under immigration law, the detention or the conditions
must be accompanied by a meaningful process of ongoing review that takes into
account the context and circumstances of the individual case. The person must
be accorded meaningful opportunities to challenge his or her continued
detention or the conditions of his or her release. [97-98] [105] [107]
Extended periods of detention pending deportation
under the certificate provisions of the IRPA do not violate ss. 7
and 12 of the Charter if accompanied by a process that provides regular
opportunities for review of detention, taking into account all of the relevant
factors, including the reasons for detention, the length of the detention, the
reasons for the delay in deportation, the anticipated future length of
detention, if applicable, and the availability of alternatives to detention.
However, this does not preclude the possibility of a judge concluding at a
certain point that a particular detention constitutes cruel and unusual
treatment or is inconsistent with the principles of fundamental justice. [110‑116]
[123]
(4) Differential treatment of citizens and non‑citizens
Since s. 6 of the Charter specifically
provides for differential treatment of citizens and non‑citizens in
deportation matters, a deportation scheme that applies to non‑citizens,
but not to citizens, does not for that reason alone infringe s. 15 of the Charter .
Even though the detention of some of the appellants has been long, the record
does not establish that the detentions at issue have become unhinged from the
state’s purpose of deportation. [129] [131]
(5) Rule
of law
The rule of law is not infringed by (1) the
unavailability of an appeal of the designated judge’s review of the
reasonableness of the certificate; or (2) the provision for the issuance
of an arrest warrant by the executive in the case of a permanent resident, or
for mandatory arrest without a warrant following an executive decision in the
case of a foreign national. First, there is no constitutional right to an
appeal, nor can such a right be said to flow from the rule of law in the
present context. Second, the rule of law does not categorically prohibit
automatic detention, or detention on the basis of an executive decision, and
the constitutional protections surrounding arrest and detention are set out in
the Charter . [133] [136-137]
(6) Remedy
The IRPA’s procedure for the judicial approval
of certificates is inconsistent with the Charter , and hence of no force
or effect. This declaration is suspended for one year from the date of this
judgment. If the government chooses to have the reasonableness of C’s
certificate determined during the one‑year suspension period, the
existing process under the IRPA will apply. After that period, H and
A’s certificates will lose their “reasonable” status and it will be open to
them to apply to have the certificates quashed. Likewise, any certificates or
detention reviews occurring after the one‑year delay will be subject to
the new process devised by Parliament. Further, s. 84(2), which denies a
prompt hearing to foreign nationals by imposing a 120‑day embargo, after
confirmation of the certificate, on applications for release, is struck, and
s. 83 is modified so as to allow for review of the detention of a foreign
national both before and after the certificate has been deemed reasonable. [139‑141]
Cases Cited
Referred to: Singh
v. Minister of Employment and Immigration, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 177; Suresh
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2002]
1 S.C.R. 3, 2002 SCC 1; Jaballah (Re) (2006), 148
C.R.R. (2d) 1, 2006 FC 1230; Medovarski v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2005] 2 S.C.R. 539,
2005 SCC 51; Chiarelli v. Canada (Minister of Employment and
Immigration), [1992] 1 S.C.R. 711; United States of America v.
Ferras, [2006] 2 S.C.R. 77, 2006 SCC 33; R. v.
Rodgers, [2006] 1 S.C.R. 554, 2006 SCC 15; Idziak v.
Canada (Minister of Justice), [1992] 3 S.C.R. 631; R. v. Lyons,
[1987] 2 S.C.R. 309; Mount Sinai Hospital Center v. Quebec
(Minister of Health and Social Services), [2001] 2 S.C.R. 281,
2001 SCC 41; R. v. Malmo‑Levine, [2003]
3 S.C.R. 571, 2003 SCC 74; Dehghani v. Canada (Minister
of Employment and Immigration), [1993] 1 S.C.R. 1053; New
Brunswick (Minister of Health and Community Services) v. G. (J.), [1999]
3 S.C.R. 46; Baker v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817; Reference re Remuneration
of Judges of the Provincial Court of Prince Edward Island, [1997]
3 S.C.R. 3; Application under s. 83.28 of the Criminal Code
(Re), [2004] 2 S.C.R. 248, 2004 SCC 42; R. v. Lippé,
[1991] 2 S.C.R. 114; Valente v. The Queen, [1985]
2 S.C.R. 673; Jaballah, Re (2004), 247 F.T.R. 68,
2004 FC 299; Charkaoui (Re), [2005] 3 F.C.R. 389,
2005 FC 248; Mugesera v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [2005] 2 S.C.R. 100, 2005 SCC 40; R.
v. Taubler (1987), 20 O.A.C. 64; R. v. Turlon (1989),
49 C.C.C. (3d) 186; Provincial Court Judges’ Assn. of New
Brunswick v. New Brunswick (Minister of Justice), [2005]
2 S.C.R. 286, 2005 SCC 44; Goodis v. Ontario (Ministry of
Correctional Services), [2006] 2 S.C.R. 32,
2006 SCC 31; Ruby v. Canada (Solicitor General), [2002]
4 S.C.R. 3, 2002 SCC 75; Re B.C. Motor Vehicle Act,
[1985] 2 S.C.R. 486; R. v. Oakes, [1986]
1 S.C.R. 103; R. v. Malik, [2005] B.C.J. No. 521 (QL),
2005 BCSC 350; Eur. Court H.R., Chahal v. United Kingdom,
judgment of 15 November 1996, Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1996-V;
M. v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, [2004] 2 All
E.R. 863, [2004] EWCA Civ 324, aff’g [2004] UKSIAC 17/2002 (BAILII),
March 8, 2004; R. v. Chaulk, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 1303; R.
v. Swain, [1991] 1 S.C.R. 933; Rasul v. Bush,
542 U.S. 466 (2004); Zadvydas v. Davis, 533 U.S. 678
(2001); Slivenko v. Latvia [GC], No. 48321/99, ECHR 2003-X; R. v.
Smith, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 1045; R. v. Wiles, [2005]
3 S.C.R. 895, 2005 SCC 84; Sahin v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [1995] 1 F.C. 214; Eur. Court H.R.,
Soering case, judgment of 7 July 1989, Series A, No. 161; Charkaoui
(Re), [2004] 1 F.C.R. 528, 2003 FC 882; Ahani v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (2000), 24 Admin.
L.R. (3d) 171; Harkat v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [2007] 1 F.C.R. 321, 2006 FC 628; Almrei v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (2005),
270 F.T.R. 1, 2005 FC 1645; R. v. Governor of Durham
Prison, ex parte Singh, [1984] 1 All E.R. 983; A. v. Secretary
of State for the Home Department, [2005] 3 All E.R. 169, [2004]
UKHL 56; Roncarelli v. Duplessis, [1959] S.C.R. 121; Reference
re Manitoba Language Rights, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 721; British
Columbia v. Imperial Tobacco Canada Ltd., [2005] 2 S.C.R. 473,
2005 SCC 49; Kourtessis v. M.N.R., [1993]
2 S.C.R. 53; Zündel, Re (2004), 331 N.R. 180,
2004 FCA 394.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Anti‑terrorism
Act, S.C. 2001, c. 41 .
Anti‑terrorism, Crime and
Security Act 2001 (U.K.), 2001, c. 24,
s. 23.
Canada Evidence Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑5, ss. 37 to 39 , 38.01 , 38.02 ,
38.04 .
Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms, ss. 1 , 6(1) , 7 , 9 , 10 (c), 11 (d),
12 , 15 , 24(1) .
Canadian Security Intelligence
Service Act, S.C. 1984, c. 21 (later
R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑23 ).
Constitution Act, 1867, s. 96 .
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑46, ss. 487.055 , 503(1) .
Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F‑7, s. 4 .
Immigration Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. I‑2 (formerly Immigration Act, 1976,
S.C. 1976‑77, c. 52), ss. 39(2), (6), (9), (10), 40(1), 40.1.
Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27, ss. 33 , 55
to 58 , 77 to 85 , 112 , 115 .
Immigration and Refugee
Protection Regulations, SOR/2002‑227, r. 248.
Special Immigration Appeals
Commission Act 1997 (U.K.), 1997, c. 68,
s. 6(1), (4).
Special Immigration Appeals
Commission (Procedure) Rules 2003, S.I. 2003/1034,
rr. 35, 36, 38.
Treaties and Other International Instruments
Convention for the Protection
of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms,
213 U.N.T.S. 221, arts. 5, 14.
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APPEAL from a judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal
(Richard C.J. and Décary and Létourneau JJ.A.), [2005]
2 F.C.R. 299, 247 D.L.R. (4th) 405, 328 N.R. 201,
126 C.R.R. (2d) 298, 42 Imm. L.R. (3d) 165, [2004] F.C.J.
No. 2060 (QL), 2004 FCA 421, upholding a decision of Noël J.,
[2004] 3 F.C.R. 32, 253 F.T.R. 22, 38 Imm. L.R.
(3d) 56, [2003] F.C.J. No. 1816 (QL), 2003 FC 1419,
refusing to declare parts of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act
unconstitutional at the request of the appellant Charkaoui. Appeal
allowed.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal
(Létourneau, Sexton and Sharlow JJ.A.), [2005] 3 F.C.R. 142,
251 D.L.R. (4th) 13, 330 N.R. 73, 45 Imm. L.R.
(3d) 163, [2005] F.C.J. No. 213 (QL), 2005 FCA 54,
upholding a decision of Blanchard J., [2004] 4 F.C.R. 327,
249 F.T.R. 53, 38 Imm. L.R. (3d) 117, [2004]
F.C.J. No. 509 (QL), 2004 FC 420, refusing to declare parts of
the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act unconstitutional at the
request of the appellant Almrei. Appeal allowed.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal
(Richard C.J. and Décary and Létourneau JJ.A.) (2005),
340 N.R. 286, [2005] F.C.J. No. 1467 (QL),
2005 FCA 285, upholding a decision of Dawson J. (2005),
261 F.T.R. 52, 45 Imm. L.R. (3d) 65, [2005] F.C.J.
No. 481 (QL), 2005 FC 393, refusing to declare parts of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act unconstitutional at the request of the appellant
Harkat. Appeal allowed.
Johanne Doyon and Julius H. Grey,
for the appellant Charkaoui.
John Norris and Barbara Jackman,
for the appellant Almrei.
Paul D. Copeland and Matt Webber, for the appellant Harkat.
Bernard Laprade, Normand Lemyre
and Daniel Latulippe, for the respondents (30762).
Urszula Kaczmarczyk, Donald A. MacIntosh and Cheryl D. Mitchell,
for the respondents (30929).
Bernard Laprade, Urszula Kaczmarczyk
and Donald A. MacIntosh, for the respondents (31178).
John Corelli and Ian Bulmer,
for the intervener the Attorney General of Ontario (30762, 31178).
Shaun Nakatsuru
and Michael Doi, for the intervener the Attorney General of Ontario
(30929).
Michael Bossin, Owen M. Rees,
Vanessa Gruben and Thomas G. Conway, for the
intervener Amnesty International.
Gregory P. DelBigio and Jason B. Gratl, for the intervener the
British Columbia Civil Liberties Association.
Lorne Waldman, for
the intervener the Canadian Bar Association.
Edward L. Greenspan, Q.C., and David N. Tice, for the intervener the
Canadian Civil Liberties Association.
Sharryn Aiken, Marie
Chen and Mary Eberts, for the interveners the Canadian Council
for Refugees, the African Canadian Legal Clinic, the International Civil Liberties
Monitoring Group and the National Anti‑Racism Council of Canada.
R. Douglas Elliott
and Gabriel R. Fahel, for the intervener the Canadian Arab
Federation.
David Baker and Faisal Bhabha,
for the interveners the Canadian Council on American‑Islamic Relations
and the Canadian Muslim Civil Liberties Association.
Michael Code, for
the intervener the Criminal Lawyers’ Association (Ontario).
Neil Finkelstein
and Catherine Beagan Flood, for the intervener the Federation
of Law Societies of Canada.
Sujit Choudhry and
Robert A. Centa, for the interveners the University of
Toronto, Faculty of Law — International Human Rights Clinic, and Human Rights
Watch.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
The Chief Justice —
I. Introduction
1
One of the most fundamental responsibilities of a government is to
ensure the security of its citizens. This may require it to act on information
that it cannot disclose and to detain people who threaten national security.
Yet in a constitutional democracy, governments must act accountably and in
conformity with the Constitution and the rights and liberties it guarantees.
These two propositions describe a tension that lies at the heart of modern
democratic governance. It is a tension that must be resolved in a way that
respects the imperatives both of security and of accountable constitutional
governance.
2
In this case, we are confronted with a statute, the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 (“IRPA ”), that attempts to
resolve this tension in the immigration context by allowing the Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration (the “Minister”), and the Minister of Public Safety
and Emergency Preparedness (collectively “the ministers”) to issue a
certificate of inadmissibility leading to the detention of a permanent resident
or foreign national deemed to be a threat to national security. The
certificate and the detention are both subject to review by a judge, in a
process that may deprive the person named in the certificate of some or all of
the information on the basis of which the certificate was issued or the
detention ordered. The question is whether the solution that Parliament has
enacted conforms to the Constitution, and in particular the guarantees in the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms that protect against unjustifiable
intrusions on liberty, equality and the freedom from arbitrary detention and
from cruel and unusual treatment.
3
I conclude that the IRPA unjustifiably violates s. 7 of the Charter
by allowing the issuance of a certificate of inadmissibility based on secret
material without providing for an independent agent at the stage of judicial
review to better protect the named person’s interests. I also conclude that
some of the time limits in the provisions for continuing detention of a foreign
national violate ss. 9 and 10 (c) because they are arbitrary. I find
that s. 12 has not been shown to be violated since a meaningful detention
review process offers relief against the possibility of indefinite detention.
Finally, I find that there is no breach of the s. 15 equality right.
II. Background
4
The provisions of the IRPA at issue in this case,
reproduced in the Appendix, are part of Canada’s immigration law. Their
purpose is to permit the removal of non-citizens living in Canada — permanent
residents and foreign nationals — on various grounds, including connection with
terrorist activities. The scheme permits deportation on the basis of
confidential information that is not to be disclosed to the person named in the
certificate or anyone acting on the person’s behalf or in his or her interest.
The scheme was meant to “facilitat[e] the early removal of persons who are
inadmissible on serious grounds, including persons posing a threat to the
security of Canada” (Clause by Clause Analysis (2001), at p. 72). In
reality, however, it may also lead to long periods of incarceration.
5
The IRPA requires the ministers to sign a certificate declaring
that a foreign national or permanent resident is inadmissible to enter or
remain in Canada on grounds of security, among others: s. 77 . A judge of the
Federal Court then reviews the certificate to determine whether it is
reasonable: s. 80. If the state so requests, the review is conducted in
camera and ex parte. The person named in the certificate has no
right to see the material on the basis of which the certificate was issued.
Non-sensitive material may be disclosed; sensitive or confidential material
must not be disclosed if the government objects. The named person and his or
her lawyer cannot see undisclosed material, although the ministers and the
reviewing judge may rely on it. At the end of the day, the judge must provide
the person with a summary of the case against him or her — a summary that does
not disclose material that might compromise national security. If the judge
determines that the certificate is reasonable, there is no appeal and no way to
have the decision judicially reviewed: s. 80(3).
6
The consequences of the issuance and confirmation of a certificate of
inadmissibility vary, depending on whether the person is a permanent resident
of Canada or a foreign national whose right to remain in Canada has not yet
been confirmed. Permanent residents who the ministers have reasonable grounds
to believe are a danger to national security may be held in detention.
In order to detain them, the ministers must issue a warrant stating that the person
is a threat to national security or to another person, or is unlikely to appear
at a proceeding or for removal. Foreign nationals, meanwhile, must be
detained once a certificate is issued: under s. 82(2), the detention is
automatic. While the detention of a permanent resident must be reviewed within
48 hours, a foreign national, on the other hand, must apply for review, but may
not do so until 120 days after a judge of the Federal Court determines the
certificate to be reasonable. In both cases, if the judge
finds the certificate to be reasonable, it becomes a removal order. Such
an order deprives permanent residents of their status; their detention is then
subject to review on the same basis as that of other foreign nationals.
7
The removal order cannot be appealed and may be immediately enforced,
thus eliminating the requirement of holding or continuing an examination or an
admissibility hearing: s. 81(b). The detainee, whether a permanent
resident or a foreign national, may no longer apply for protection: s. 81(c).
Additionally, a refugee or a protected person determined to be inadmissible on
any of the grounds for a certificate loses the protection of the principle of
non-refoulement under s. 115(1) if, in the opinion of the Minister, the person
should not be allowed to remain in Canada on the basis of the nature and
severity of acts committed or of danger to the security of Canada: s. 115(2).
This means that he or she may, at least in theory, be deported to torture.
8
A permanent resident detained under a certificate is entitled to
a review of his or her detention every six months. Under s.
83(3), a judge must order the detention of a permanent resident to be continued
if the judge is satisfied that the person continues to pose a danger to
security or to the safety of another, or is unlikely to appear at a proceeding
or for removal.
9
The detention of foreign nationals, on the other hand, is mandatory. If
a foreign national has not been removed within 120 days of the certificate
being found reasonable by a judge, however, the judge may order the person
released on appropriate conditions if “satisfied that the foreign national will
not be removed from Canada within a reasonable time and that the release will
not pose a danger to national security or to the safety of any person”: s.
84(2). Even if released, the foreign national may be deported.
10
Mr. Charkaoui is a permanent resident, while Messrs. Harkat and Almrei
are foreign nationals who had been recognized as Convention refugees. All were
living in Canada when they were arrested and detained. At the time of the
decisions on appeal, all had been detained for some time — since 2003, 2002 and
2001 respectively. In 2001, a judge of the Federal Court determined Mr.
Almrei’s certificate to be reasonable; another determined Mr. Harkat’s
certificate to be reasonable in 2005. The reasonableness of Mr. Charkaoui’s
certificate has yet to be determined. Messrs. Charkaoui and Harkat were
released on conditions in 2005 and 2006 respectively, but Mr. Harkat has been
advised that he will be deported to Algeria, which he is contesting in other
proceedings. Mr. Almrei remains in detention. In all these cases, the
detentions were based on allegations that the individuals constituted a threat
to the security of Canada by reason of involvement in terrorist activities. In
the course of their detentions, all three appellants challenged,
unsuccessfully, the constitutionality of the IRPA ’s certificate scheme
and detention review process.
III. Issues
11
The appellants argue that the IRPA ’s certificate scheme under
which their detentions were ordered is unconstitutional. They argue that it
violates five provisions of the Charter : the s. 7 guarantee of
life, liberty and security of the person; the s. 9 guarantee against arbitrary
detention; the s. 10 (c) guarantee of a prompt review of detention; the
s. 12 guarantee against cruel and unusual treatment; and the s. 15 guarantee of
equal protection and equal benefit of the law. They also allege violations of
unwritten constitutional principles. I discuss these claims under the
following headings:
A. Does the procedure under
the IRPA for determining the reasonableness of the certificate infringe
s. 7 of the Charter , and if so, is the infringement justified
under s. 1 of the Charter ?
B. Does the detention of
permanent residents or foreign nationals under the IRPA infringe ss. 7 ,
9 , 10 (c) or 12 of the Charter , and if so, are the
infringements justified under s. 1 of the Charter ?
C. Do the certificate and detention
review procedures discriminate between citizens and non-citizens,
contrary to s. 15 of the Charter , and if so, is the discrimination
justified under s. 1 of the Charter ?
D. Are the IRPA certificate
provisions inconsistent with the constitutional principle of the rule of law?
A. Does the Procedure Under the IRPA for
Determining the Reasonableness of the Certificate Infringe Section 7 of the
Charter , and if so, Is the Infringement Justified Under Section 1 of the
Charter ?
1. Is Section 7 of the Charter Engaged?
12
Section 7 of the Charter guarantees the right to life, liberty
and security of the person, and the right not to be deprived thereof except in
accordance with the principles of fundamental justice. This requires a
claimant to prove two matters: first, that there has been or could be a
deprivation of the right to life, liberty and security of the person, and
second, that the deprivation was not or would not be in accordance with the
principles of fundamental justice. If the claimant succeeds, the government
bears the burden of justifying the deprivation under s. 1 , which provides that
the rights guaranteed by the Charter are subject only to such reasonable
limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and
democratic society.
13
The provisions at issue, found at Division 9 of Part 1 of the IRPA ,
clearly deprive detainees such as the appellants of their liberty. The person
named in a certificate can face detention pending the outcome of the
proceedings. In the case of a foreign national, this detention is automatic and
lasts at least until 120 days after the certificate is deemed
reasonable. For both foreign nationals and permanent residents, the period of
detention can be, and frequently is, several years. Indeed, Mr. Almrei remains
in detention and does not know when, if ever, he will be released.
14
The detainee’s security may be further affected in various ways. The
certificate process may lead to removal from Canada, to a place where his or
her life or freedom would be threatened: see e.g. Singh v. Minister of Employment and Immigration, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 177, at p. 207, per
Wilson J. A certificate may bring with it the accusation that one is a
terrorist, which could cause irreparable harm to the individual, particularly
if he or she is eventually deported to his or her home country. Finally, a
person who is determined to be inadmissible on grounds of security loses the
protection of s. 115(1) of the IRPA , which means that under s. 115(2) ,
he or she can be deported to torture if the Minister is of the opinion that the
person is a danger to the security of Canada.
15
In Suresh v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[2002] 1 S.C.R. 3, 2002 SCC 1, this Court stated, at para. 76, that “barring
extraordinary circumstances, deportation to torture will generally violate the
principles of fundamental justice protected by s. 7 of the Charter .”
More recently, the Federal Court has ruled that another certificate detainee is
at risk of torture if deported, and that there were no exceptional
circumstances justifying such a deportation: Jaballah (Re) (2006), 148
C.R.R. (2d) 1, 2006 FC 1230. The appellants claim that they would be at risk
of torture if deported to their countries of origin. But in each of their cases,
this remains to be proven as part of an application for protection under the
provisions of Part 2 of the IRPA . The issue of deportation to torture
is consequently not before us here.
16
The individual interests at stake suggest that s. 7 of the Charter ,
the purpose of which is to protect the life, liberty and security of the
person, is engaged, and this leads directly to the question whether the IRPA ’s
impingement on these interests conforms to the principles of fundamental
justice. The government argues, relying on Medovarski v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2005] 2 S.C.R. 539, 2005 SCC 51, that s. 7 does not apply
because this is an immigration matter. The comment from that
case on which the government relies was made in response to a claim that to
deport a non-citizen violates s. 7 of the Charter . In
considering this claim, the Court, per McLachlin C.J., noted, at para.
46, citing Chiarelli v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration),
[1992] 1 S.C.R. 711, at p. 733, that “[t]he most fundamental principle of
immigration law is that non-citizens do not have an unqualified right to enter
or remain in Canada”. The Court added: “Thus the deportation of a non-citizen in
itself cannot implicate the liberty and security interests protected by s.
7 ” (Medovarski, at para. 46 (emphasis added)).
17
Medovarski thus does not stand for the proposition that
proceedings related to deportation in the immigration context are immune from
s. 7 scrutiny. While the deportation of a non-citizen in the immigration
context may not in itself engage s. 7 of the Charter , some
features associated with deportation, such as detention in the course of the
certificate process or the prospect of deportation to torture, may do so.
18
In determining whether s. 7 applies, we must look at the
interests at stake rather than the legal label attached to the impugned
legislation. As Professor Hamish Stewart writes:
Many of the principles of fundamental justice were
developed in criminal cases, but their application is not restricted to
criminal cases: they apply whenever one of the three protected interests is
engaged. Put another way, the principles of fundamental justice apply in criminal
proceedings, not because they are criminal proceedings, but because the liberty
interest is always engaged in criminal proceedings. [Emphasis in original.]
(“Is Indefinite Detention of Terrorist Suspects Really
Constitutional?” (2005), 54 U.N.B.L.J. 235, at p. 242)
I conclude
that the appellants’ challenges to the fairness of the process leading to
possible deportation and the loss of liberty associated with detention raise
important issues of liberty and security, and that s. 7 of the Charter
is engaged.
2. How Do Security Considerations Affect the
Section 7 Analysis?
19
Section 7 of the Charter requires that laws that interfere with
life, liberty and security of the person conform to the principles of
fundamental justice — the basic principles that underlie our notions of justice
and fair process. These principles include a guarantee of procedural fairness,
having regard to the circumstances and consequences of the intrusion on life,
liberty or security: Suresh, at para. 113.
20
Section 7 of the Charter requires not a particular type of
process, but a fair process having regard to the nature of the proceedings and
the interests at stake: United States of America v. Ferras, [2006] 2
S.C.R. 77, 2006 SCC 33, at para. 14; R. v. Rodgers, [2006] 1 S.C.R. 554,
2006 SCC 15, at para. 47; Idziak v.
Canada (Minister of Justice),
[1992] 3 S.C.R. 631, at pp. 656-57. The procedures required to meet the
demands of fundamental justice depend on the context (see Rodgers; R.
v. Lyons, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 309, at p. 361; Chiarelli,
at pp. 743-44; Mount Sinai Hospital Center v. Quebec (Minister of Health and
Social Services), [2001] 2 S.C.R. 281, 2001 SCC 41, at paras. 20-21). Societal
interests may be taken into account in elucidating the applicable principles of
fundamental justice: R. v. Malmo-Levine, [2003] 3 S.C.R. 571, 2003 SCC
74, at para. 98.
21
Unlike s. 1, s. 7 is not concerned with whether a limit on life, liberty
or security of the person is justified, but with whether the limit has
been imposed in a way that respects the principles of fundamental justice.
Hence, it has been held that s. 7 does not permit “a free‑standing
inquiry . . . into whether a particular legislative measure ‘strikes the right
balance’ between individual and societal interests in general” (Malmo-Levine,
at para. 96). Nor is “achieving the right balance . . . itself an overarching
principle of fundamental justice” (ibid.). As the majority in Malmo-Levine
noted, to hold otherwise “would entirely collapse the s. 1 inquiry into s. 7” (ibid.).
This in turn would relieve the state from its burden of justifying intrusive
measures, and require the Charter complainant to show that the measures
are not justified.
22
The question at the s. 7 stage is whether the principles of fundamental
justice relevant to the case have been observed in substance, having regard to
the context and the seriousness of the violation. The issue is whether the
process is fundamentally unfair to the affected person. If so, the deprivation
of life, liberty or security of the person simply does not conform to the
requirements of s. 7. The inquiry then shifts to s. 1 of the Charter ,
at which point the government has an opportunity to establish that the flawed
process is nevertheless justified having regard, notably, to the public
interest.
23
It follows that while administrative
constraints associated with the context of national security may inform the
analysis on whether a particular process is fundamentally unfair, security
concerns cannot be used to excuse procedures that do not conform to fundamental
justice at the s. 7 stage of the analysis. If the context makes it impossible
to adhere to the principles of fundamental justice in their usual form,
adequate substitutes may be found. But the principles must be respected to
pass the hurdle of s. 7. That is
the bottom line.
24
In the instant case, the context is the detention, incidental to their
removal or an attempt to remove them from the country, of permanent residents
and foreign nationals who the ministers conclude pose a threat to national
security. This context may impose certain administrative constraints that may
be properly considered at the s. 7 stage. Full disclosure of the information
relied on may not be possible. The executive branch of government may be
required to act quickly, without recourse, at least in the first instance, to
the judicial procedures normally required for the deprivation of liberty or
security of the person.
25
At the same time, it is a context that may have important, indeed
chilling, consequences for the detainee. The seriousness of the individual
interests at stake forms part of the contextual analysis. As this Court stated
in Suresh, “[t]he greater the effect on the life of the individual by
the decision, the greater the need for procedural protections to meet the
common law duty of fairness and the requirements of fundamental justice under
s. 7 of the Charter ” (para. 118). Thus, “factual situations which are
closer or analogous to criminal proceedings will merit greater vigilance by the
courts”: Dehghani v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration),
[1993] 1 S.C.R. 1053, at p. 1077, per Iacobucci J.
26
The potential consequences of deportation combined with allegations of
terrorism have been under a harsh spotlight due to the recent report of the
Commission of Inquiry into the Actions of Canadian Officials in Relation to
Maher Arar. Mr. Arar, a Canadian citizen born in Syria, was detained by
American officials and deported to Syria. The report concludes that it is
“very likely that, in making the decisions to detain and remove Mr. Arar to
Syria, the U.S. authorities relied on information about Mr. Arar provided by
the RCMP”, including unfounded suspicions linking Mr. Arar to terrorist groups:
Report of the Events Relating to Maher Arar: Analysis and Recommendations
(2006) (“Arar Inquiry”), at p. 30. In Syria, Mr. Arar was tortured and detained
under inhumane conditions for over 11 months. In his report, Commissioner
O’Connor recommends enhanced review and accountability mechanisms for agencies
dealing with national security, including not only the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police, but also Citizenship and Immigration Canada and the Canada Border
Services Agency. He notes that these immigration-related institutions can have
an important impact on individual rights but that there is a lack of
transparency surrounding their activities because their activities often
involve sensitive national security information that cannot be disclosed to the
public: A New Review Mechanism for the RCMP’s National Security Activities
(2006), at pp. 562-65. Moreover, the sensitive nature of security information
means that investigations lead to fewer prosecutions. This, in turn, restricts
the ability of courts to guarantee individual rights: “Unless charges are laid,
. . . the choice of investigative targets, methods of information collection
and exchange, and means of investigation generally will not be subject to
judicial scrutiny, media coverage or public debate” (p. 439).
27
The procedures required to conform to the principles of fundamental
justice must reflect the exigencies of the security context. Yet they cannot
be permitted to erode the essence of s. 7 . The principles of fundamental
justice cannot be reduced to the point where they cease to provide the
protection of due process that lies at the heart of s. 7 of the Charter .
The protection may not be as complete as in a case where national security
constraints do not operate. But to satisfy s. 7 , meaningful and substantial
protection there must be.
3. Relevant Principles of Fundamental Justice
28
The overarching principle of fundamental justice that applies here is
this: before the state can detain people for significant periods of time, it
must accord them a fair judicial process: New Brunswick (Minister of Health
and Community Services) v. G. (J.), [1999] 3 S.C.R. 46. “It is an ancient
and venerable principle that no person shall lose his or her liberty without
due process according to the law, which must involve a meaningful judicial
process”: Ferras, at para. 19. This principle emerged in the era
of feudal monarchy, in the form of the right to be brought before a judge on a
motion of habeas corpus. It remains as fundamental to our modern
conception of liberty as it was in the days of King John.
29
This basic principle has a number of facets. It comprises the right to
a hearing. It requires that the hearing be before an independent and
impartial magistrate. It demands a decision by the magistrate on the
facts and the law. And it entails the right to know the case put
against one, and the right to answer that case. Precisely how these
requirements are met will vary with the context. But for s. 7 to be satisfied,
each of them must be met in substance.
30
The IRPA process includes a hearing. The process consists of two
phases, one executive and one judicial. There is no hearing at the executive
phase that results in issuance of the certificate. However, this is followed
by a review before a judge, where the named person is afforded a hearing.
Thus, the first requirement, that of a hearing, is met.
31
Questions arise, however, on the other requirements, namely: that the
judge be independent and impartial; that the judge make a judicial decision
based on the facts and the law; and finally, that the named person be afforded
an opportunity to meet the case put against him or her by being informed of
that case and being allowed to question or counter it. I conclude that the IRPA
scheme meets the first requirement of independence and impartiality, but
fails to satisfy the second and third requirements, which are interrelated here.
4. Is the Judge Independent and Impartial?
32
Although the scope of the required hearing can vary according to context
(Baker v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] 2
S.C.R. 817), a hearing must include “[a]n independent judicial phase and an
impartial judge” (Ferras, at para. 25). This requirement is also
consistent with the unwritten constitutional principle of judicial
independence: Reference re Remuneration of Judges of the Provincial Court of
Prince Edward Island, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 3. It has also been called “the
cornerstone of the common law duty of procedural fairness” (Application
under s. 83.28 of the Criminal Code
(Re), [2004] 2 S.C.R. 248, 2004 SCC 42 (“Re Bagri”), at para.
81), and is necessary in order to ensure judicial impartiality: R. v. Lippé,
[1991] 2 S.C.R. 114, at p. 139. It is not enough that the judge in fact be
independent and impartial; fundamental justice requires that the judge also
appear to be independent and impartial. This flows from the fact that judicial
independence has two facets: actual independence and perceived independence (Valente
v. The Queen, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 673, at p. 689).
33
The IRPA scheme provides for the certificate issued by the
ministers to be reviewed by a “designated judge”, a judge of the Federal Court
of Canada. The question here is whether, from an institutional perspective,
the role assigned to designated judges under the IRPA leads to a
perception that independence and impartiality are compromised.
34
The designated judge has been aptly described as the “cornerstone of the
procedure established by Parliament” in the IRPA (Charkaoui (Re),
[2004] 3 F.C.R. 32, 2003 FC 1419, at para. 120, per Noël J.). The judge
is the sole avenue of review for the named person and the only person capable
of providing the essential judicial component of the process.
35
When reviewing the certificate, the judge sees all the material relied
on by the government. But if the government claims confidentiality for certain
material, the judge cannot share this material with the named person. The
judge must make his or her decision without hearing any objections the named
person might be able to make, were he or she granted access to the whole of the
record. Part of the hearing may be held in camera, with only the judge
and the government lawyers in the room. The named person is not there. His or
her lawyer is not there. There is no one to speak for the person or to test
the evidence put against him or her.
36
These circumstances may give rise to a perception that the designated
judge under the IRPA may not be entirely independent and impartial as
between the state and the person named in the certificate. Speaking at a
conference in March 2002, Hugessen J. of the Federal Court expressed unease
with the role assigned to designated judges under the IRPA :
We do not like this process of having to sit alone hearing only one
party, and looking at the materials produced by only one party . . . .
If there is one thing that I learned in my practice
at the Bar, and I have managed to retain it through all these years, it is that
good cross-examination requires really careful preparation and a good knowledge
of your case. And by definition, judges do not do that. . . . [W]e do
not have any knowledge except what is given to us and when it is only given to
us by one party we are not well suited to test the materials that are put
before us. [Emphasis added.]
(J. K. Hugessen, “Watching the Watchers: Democratic Oversight”, in D.
Daubney et al., eds., Terrorism, Law and Democracy: How is Canada changing
following September 11? (2002), 381, at p. 384)
37
Three related concerns arise with respect to independence and
impartiality. First is the concern that the IRPA may be perceived to
deprive the judge of his or her independent judicial role and co-opt the judge
as an agent of the executive branch of government. Second is the concern that
the designated judge functions as an investigative officer rather than a judge.
Third is the concern that the judge, whose role includes compensating for the
fact that the named person may not have access to material and may not be
present at the hearing, will become associated with this person’s case.
38
The first concern is linked to the degree of deference that the
judge accords to the ministers’ conclusion that the facts supported the
issuance of a certificate and the detention of the named person. Judges working under the process have eschewed an overly deferential
approach, insisting instead on a searching examination of the reasonableness of
the certificate on the material placed before them: Jaballah, Re
(2004), 247 F.T.R. 68, 2004 FC 299; Charkaoui (Re), [2005] 2 F.C.R. 299,
2004 FCA 421, at para. 74. They are correct to do so, having regard to the
language of the provision, the history of its adoption, and the role of the
designated judge.
39
First, an active role for the designated judge is justified by the
language of the IRPA and the standards of review it establishes. The
statute requires the designated judge to determine whether the certificate is
“reasonable”, and emphasizes factual scrutiny by instructing the judge to do so
“on the basis of the information and evidence available” (s. 80(1) ). This
language, as well as the accompanying factual, legal and administrative
context, leads to the conclusion that the designated judge must review the
certificate on a standard of reasonableness. Likewise, since the ministers’
decision to detain a permanent resident is based on “reasonable grounds to
believe” (s. 82(1) ), “[i]t is logical to assume that in subsequent reviews by a
designated judge, the same standard will be used” (Charkaoui (Re), [2005]
3 F.C.R. 389, 2005 FC 248, at para. 30). The “reasonable grounds to believe”
standard requires the judge to consider whether “there is an objective basis .
. . which is based on compelling and credible information”: Mugesera v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [2005] 2 S.C.R. 100, 2005
SCC 40, at para. 114. “Reasonable grounds to believe” is the appropriate
standard for judges to apply when reviewing a continuation of detention under
the certificate provisions of the IRPA . The IRPA therefore does
not ask the designated judge to be deferential, but, rather, asks him or her to
engage in a searching review.
40
This interpretation of the IRPA is confirmed by statements made
in the course of the adoption of the scheme. While it was considering the IRPA ,
the Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration was informed that the
role of the designated judge would be to avoid treatment that is unfair,
arbitrary, or in violation of due process (Transcript of the Standing Committee
on Citizenship and Immigration, Thursday, April 26, 2001 (online)).
41
Finally, the fact that the designated judge may have access to more
information than the ministers did in making their initial decision to issue a
certificate and detain suggests that the judge possesses relative expertise on
the matters at issue and is no mere rubber stamp: Charkaoui (Re), 2003
FC 1419, at para. 125.
42
I conclude that a non-deferential role for the designated judge goes
some distance toward alleviating the first concern, that the judge will be
perceived to be in the camp of the government.
43
The second concern is that the judge may be seen to function more
as an investigator than as an independent and impartial adjudicator. The law
is clear that the principles of fundamental justice are breached if a judge is reduced to an executive,
investigative function. At the same time, the mere fact that a judge is
required to assist in an investigative activity does not deprive the judge of
the requisite independence. In Re Bagri, the Court considered whether a
provision of the Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46 , that provides for
a judge to assist the state in gathering evidence in the investigation of a
terrorist offence violated s. 7 or s. 11 (d) of the Charter .
Under s. 83.28, a judge can order a person to attend before the judge (or before
another judge) to give information on a suspected past or future terrorism
offence, and supervise the taking of the person’s statement. The hearing can take place in
camera, and its very existence can be kept secret. Critics of s. 83.28
argued that it co-opts the presiding judge into performing an investigative
rather than an adjudicative role. The majority held that the provision violates
neither s. 7 of the Charter nor the unwritten principle of judicial
independence. It stressed that s. 83.28 gives judges broad discretion to vary
the terms of the order made under it and to ensure that constitutional and
common law values are respected. It also noted that judges routinely
participate in investigations in the criminal context and that their role in
these situations is to “act as a check against state excess” (para. 86), and
emphasized that in the context of investigative hearings the judge was not
asked to question the individual or challenge the evidence, but merely to
mediate and ensure the fairness of the proceeding. However, it warned that “once legislation
invokes the aid of the judiciary, we must remain vigilant to ensure that the
integrity of its role is not compromised or diluted” (para. 87).
44
The IRPA provisions
before the Court, like s. 83.28 of the Criminal Code , preserve the
essential elements of the judicial role. It is even clearer in this case than
in Re Bagri that the process established by the legislation at issue is
not purely investigative; the judge’s task of determining whether the
certificate is “reasonable” seems on its face closer to adjudicative
review of an executive act than to investigation. On the other hand, the
provisions seem to require the judge to actively vet the evidence, an activity
that the Court viewed as suspect in Re Bagri. Noël J., the
designated judge for Mr. Charkaoui’s case, stated:
Designated judges preside
over hearings and hear the Minister’s witnesses. They examine witnesses
themselves as the need arises. They examine the documents carefully to
determine which information is related to security and which information is
not. In order to do so, they examine, among other things, the sources of the
information, the way in which it was obtained, the reliability of the sources
and the method used, and whether it is possible to corroborate the information
by other means.
(2003 FC 1419, at para.
101)
These comments
suggest that while the designated judge may be more involved in vetting and
skeptically scrutinizing the evidence than would be the case in a normal
judicial hearing, the judge is nevertheless performing the adjudicative
function of evaluation, rather than the executive function of investigation.
However, care must be taken to avoid allowing the investigative aspect of the
process to overwhelm its adjudicative aspect.
45
The third concern is that the judge’s role as sole protector of
the named person’s interest may associate the judge, in fact or perception,
with that interest. A judge who is obliged to take on a “defence” role in the
absence of counsel may unconsciously become associated with that camp: R. v.
Taubler (1987), 20 O.A.C. 64, at p. 71; R. v. Turlon (1989), 49
C.C.C. (3d) 186 (Ont. C.A.), at p. 191. This concern must be balanced against
the opposite concern that the judge may appear to be part of the government
scheme and hence in the government’s camp. The critical consideration,
however, is that the IRPA permits — indeed requires — the judge to
conduct the review in an independent and judicial fashion. Provided the judge
does so, the scheme cannot be condemned on the ground that he or she is, in
fact or perception, in the named person’s camp.
46
I conclude that, on its face, the IRPA process is designed to
preserve the independence and impartiality of the designated judge, as required
by s. 7 . Properly followed by judges committed to a searching review, it
cannot be said to compromise the perceived independence and impartiality of
the designated judge.
47
I note that this conclusion conclusively rebuts the appellant
Charkaoui’s contention that the IRPA breaches the unwritten
constitutional principle of judicial independence affirmed in Provincial
Court Judges’ Assn. of New Brunswick v. New Brunswick (Minister of Justice),
[2005] 2 S.C.R. 286, 2005 SCC 44.
5. Is the Decision Based on the Facts and the
Law?
48
To comply with s. 7 of the Charter , the
magistrate must make a decision based on the facts and the law. In the
extradition context, the principles of fundamental justice have been held to require, “at a minimum, a meaningful judicial
assessment of the case on the basis of the evidence and the law. A judge
considers the respective rights of the litigants or parties and makes findings
of fact on the basis of evidence and applies the law to those findings. Both
facts and law must be considered for a true adjudication. Since Bonham’s Case [(1610), 8 Co. Rep. 113b, 77 E.R. 646],
the essence of a judicial hearing has been the treatment of facts revealed by
the evidence in consideration of the substantive rights of the parties as set
down by law” (Ferras, at para. 25). The individual and societal
interests at stake in the certificate of inadmissibility context suggest
similar requirements.
49
The IRPA
process at issue seeks to meet this requirement by placing material before the
judge for evaluation. As a practical matter, most if not all of the material
that the judge considers is produced by the government and can be vetted for
reliability and sufficiency only by the judge. The normal standards used to
ensure the reliability of evidence in court do not apply: s. 78(j). The
named person may be shown little or none of the material relied on by the ministers
and the judge, and may thus not be in a position to know or challenge the case
against him or her. It follows that the judge’s decision, while based on the evidence
before him or her, may not be based on all of the evidence available.
50
There are two types of judicial systems, and
they ensure that the full case is placed before the judge in two different
ways. In inquisitorial systems, as in Continental Europe, the judge takes
charge of the gathering of evidence in an independent and impartial way. By
contrast, an adversarial system, which is the norm in Canada, relies on the
parties — who are entitled to disclosure of the case to meet, and to full
participation in open proceedings — to produce the relevant evidence. The designated
judge under the IRPA does not possess the full and independent powers to
gather evidence that exist in the inquisitorial process. At the same time, the
named person is not given the disclosure and the right to participate in the
proceedings that characterize the adversarial process. The result is a concern
that the designated judge, despite his or her best efforts to get all the
relevant evidence, may be obliged — perhaps unknowingly — to make the required
decision based on only part of the relevant evidence. As Hugessen J. has
noted, the adversarial system provides “the real warranty that the outcome of
what we do is going to be fair and just” (p. 385); without it, the judge may
feel “a little bit like a fig leaf” (Proceedings of the March 2002 Conference, at p. 386).
51
Judges of the Federal Court have worked
assiduously to overcome the difficulties inherent in the role the IRPA
has assigned to them. To their credit, they have adopted a
pseudo-inquisitorial role and sought to seriously test the protected
documentation and information. But the role remains pseudo-inquisitorial.
The judge is not afforded the power to independently investigate all relevant
facts that true inquisitorial judges enjoy. At the same time, since the named
person is not given a full picture of the case to meet, the judge cannot rely
on the parties to present missing evidence. The result is that, at the end of
the day, one cannot be sure that the judge has been exposed to the whole
factual picture.
52
Similar concerns
arise with respect to the requirement that the decision be based on the law.
Without knowledge of the information put against him or her, the named person
may not be in a position to raise legal objections relating to the evidence, or
to develop legal arguments based on the evidence. The named person is, to be
sure, permitted to make legal representations. But without disclosure and
full participation throughout the process, he or she may not be in a position
to put forward a full legal argument.
6. Is
the “Case to Meet” Principle Satisfied?
53
Last but not least, a fair hearing requires that the affected
person be informed of the case against him or her, and be permitted to respond
to that case. This right is well established in immigration law. The question
is whether the procedures “provide an adequate opportunity for [an affected
person] to state his case and know the case he has to meet” (Singh, at
p. 213). Similarly, in Suresh, the Court held that a person facing
deportation to torture under s. 53(1)(b) of the former Immigration
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. I-2, must “[n]ot only . . . be informed of the
case to be met . . . [but] also be given an opportunity to challenge the
information of the Minister where issues as to its validity arise” (para. 123).
54
Under the IRPA ’s certificate scheme, the named person may be
deprived of access to some or all of the information put against him or her,
which would deny the person the ability to know the case to meet. Without this
information, the named person may not be in a position to contradict errors,
identify omissions, challenge the credibility of informants or refute false
allegations. This problem is serious in itself. It also underlies the concerns,
discussed above, about the independence and impartiality of the designated
judge, and the ability of the judge to make a decision based on the facts and
law.
55
Confidentiality is a constant preoccupation of the certificate
scheme. The judge “shall ensure” the confidentiality of the information on
which the certificate is based and of any other evidence if, in the opinion of
the judge, disclosure would be injurious to national security or to the safety
of any person: s. 78(b). At the request of either minister “at any time
during the proceedings”, the judge “shall hear” information or evidence in the
absence of the named person and his or her counsel if, in the opinion of the
judge, its disclosure would be injurious to national security or to the safety
of any person: s. 78(e). The judge “shall provide” the named person
with a summary of information that enables him or her to be reasonably informed
of the circumstances giving rise to the certificate, but the summary cannot
include anything that would, in the opinion of the judge, be injurious to
national security or to the safety of any person: s. 78(h). Ultimately, the judge may have to consider information that
is not included in the summary: s. 78(g). In the result, the judge may be
required to decide the case, wholly or in part, on the basis of information
that the named person and his or her counsel never see. The named person may
know nothing of the case to meet, and although technically afforded an
opportunity to be heard, may be left in a position of having no idea as to what
needs to be said.
56
The same concerns arise with respect to the detention review process
under ss. 83 and 84 of the IRPA . Section 78 applies to detention
reviews under s. 83 , and it has been found to apply to detention reviews under
s. 84(2) : Almrei v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[2005] 3 F.C.R. 142, 2005 FCA 54, at paras. 71-72.
57
The right to know the case to be met is not absolute. Canadian
statutes sometimes provide for ex parte or in camera hearings, in
which judges must decide important issues after hearing from only one side. In Rodgers,
the majority of this Court declined to recognize notice and participation as
invariable constitutional norms, emphasizing a context-sensitive approach to
procedural fairness. And in Goodis v. Ontario (Ministry of Correctional
Services), [2006] 2 S.C.R. 32, 2006 SCC 31, the Court, per Rothstein
J., held that while “[h]earing from both sides of an issue is a principle to be
departed from only in exceptional circumstances”, in the ordinary case, a judge
would be “well equipped . . . to determine whether a record is subject to
[solicitor-client] privilege” without the assistance of counsel on both sides
(para. 21).
58
More particularly, the Court has repeatedly recognized that
national security considerations can limit the extent of disclosure of
information to the affected individual. In Chiarelli, this Court found
that the Security Intelligence Review Committee could, in investigating certificates
under the former Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976-77, c. 52 (later
R.S.C. 1985, c. I-2), refuse to disclose details of investigation techniques
and police sources. The context for elucidating the principles of fundamental
justice in that case included the state’s “interest in effectively conducting
national security and criminal intelligence investigations and in protecting
police sources” (p. 744). In Suresh, this Court held that a refugee
facing the possibility of deportation to torture was entitled to disclosure of
all the information on which the Minister was basing his or her decision, “[s]ubject to privilege or similar valid
reasons for reduced disclosure, such as safeguarding confidential public
security documents” (para. 122). And, in Ruby v.
Canada (Solicitor General), [2002] 4 S.C.R. 3, 2002 SCC 75, the Court
upheld the section of the Privacy Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. P-21 , that
mandates in camera and ex parte proceedings where the government
claims an exemption from disclosure on grounds of national security or
maintenance of foreign confidences. The Court made clear that these societal
concerns formed part of the relevant context for determining the scope of the
applicable principles of fundamental justice (paras. 38-44).
59
In some contexts, substitutes for full disclosure may permit compliance
with s. 7 of the Charter . For example, in Rodgers, the majority
of the Court upheld the constitutionality of ex parte hearings for
applications under s. 487.055 of the Criminal Code to take DNA samples
from listed multiple offenders, on the ground that the protections Parliament
had put in place were adequate (paras. 51-52). Similarly, in Chiarelli,
the Court upheld the lack of disclosure on the basis that the information
disclosed by way of summary and the opportunity to call witnesses and
cross-examine RCMP witnesses who testified in camera satisfied the
requirements of fundamental justice. And in Ruby, the Court held that
the substitute measures provided by Parliament satisfied the constitutional
requirements of procedural fairness (para. 42). Arbour J. stated: “In such
circumstances, fairness is met through other procedural safeguards such as
subsequent disclosure, judicial review and rights of appeal” (para. 40).
60
Where limited disclosure or ex parte hearings have been found to
satisfy the principles of fundamental justice, the intrusion on liberty and
security has typically been less serious than that effected by the IRPA :
Rodgers, at para. 53. It is one thing to deprive a person of full
information where fingerprinting is at stake, and quite another to deny him or
her information where the consequences are removal from the country or
indefinite detention. Moreover, even in the less intrusive situations, courts
have insisted that disclosure be as specific and complete as possible.
61
In the context of national security, non-disclosure, which may be
extensive, coupled with the grave intrusions on liberty imposed on a detainee,
makes it difficult, if not impossible, to find substitute procedures that will
satisfy s. 7. Fundamental justice requires substantial
compliance with the venerated principle that a person whose liberty is in
jeopardy must be given an opportunity to know the case to meet, and an
opportunity to meet the case. Yet the imperative of the protection of society
may preclude this. Information may be obtained from other countries or
from informers on condition that it not be disclosed. Or it may simply be so
critical that it cannot be disclosed without risking public security. This is
a reality of our modern world. If s. 7 is to be satisfied, either
the person must be given the necessary information, or a substantial substitute
for that information must be found. Neither is the case here.
62
The only protection the IRPA accords the named
person is a review by a designated judge to determine whether the certificate
is reasonable. The ministers argue that this is adequate in that it maintains
a “delicate balance” between the right to a fair hearing and the need to
protect confidential security intelligence information. The appellants,
on the other hand, argue that the judge’s efforts, however conscientious,
cannot provide an effective substitute for informed participation.
63
I agree with the appellants. The issue at the s. 7 stage, as
discussed above, is not whether the government has struck the right balance
between the need for security and individual liberties; that is the issue at
the stage of s. 1 justification of an established limitation on a Charter
right. The question at the s. 7 stage is whether the basic requirements of
procedural justice have been met, either in the usual way or in an alternative
fashion appropriate to the context, having regard to the government’s objective
and the interests of the person affected. The fairness of the IRPA procedure
rests entirely on the shoulders of the designated judge. Those shoulders
cannot by themselves bear the heavy burden of assuring, in fact and appearance, that the decision on the reasonableness of the certificate is
impartial, is based on a full view of the facts and law, and reflects the named
person’s knowledge of the case to meet. The judge, working under the
constraints imposed by the IRPA , simply cannot fill the vacuum left by
the removal of the traditional guarantees of a fair hearing. The judge sees
only what the ministers put before him or her. The judge, knowing nothing else
about the case, is not in a position to identify errors, find omissions or
assess the credibility and truthfulness of the information in the way the named
person would be. Although the judge may ask questions of the named person when
the hearing is reopened, the judge is prevented from asking questions that
might disclose the protected information. Likewise, since the named person does
not know what has been put against him or her, he or she does not know what the
designated judge needs to hear. If the judge cannot provide the named person
with a summary of the information that is sufficient to enable the person to
know the case to meet, then the judge cannot be satisfied that the information
before him or her is sufficient or reliable. Despite the judge’s best efforts
to question the government’s witnesses and scrutinize the documentary evidence,
he or she is placed in the situation of asking questions and ultimately
deciding the issues on the basis of incomplete and potentially unreliable
information.
64
The judge is not helpless; he or she can note contradictions between
documents, insist that there be at least some evidence on the critical points,
and make limited inferences on the value and credibility of the information
from its source. Nevertheless, the judge’s activity on behalf of the named
person is confined to what is presented by the ministers. The judge is
therefore not in a position to compensate for the lack of informed scrutiny,
challenge and counter-evidence that a person familiar with the case could
bring. Such scrutiny is the whole point of the principle that a person whose
liberty is in jeopardy must know the case to meet. Here that principle has not
merely been limited; it has been effectively gutted. How can one meet a case
one does not know?
7. Conclusion on Section 7
65
In the IRPA , an attempt has been made to meet the requirements of
fundamental justice essentially through one mechanism — the designated judge
charged with reviewing the certificate of inadmissibility and the detention.
To Parliament’s credit, a sincere attempt has been made to give the designated
judge the powers necessary to discharge the role in an independent manner,
based on the facts and the law. Yet, the secrecy required by the scheme denies
the named person the opportunity to know the case put against him or her, and
hence to challenge the government’s case. This, in turn, undermines the
judge’s ability to come to a decision based on all the relevant facts and law.
Despite the best efforts of judges of the Federal Court to breathe judicial
life into the IRPA procedure, it fails to assure the fair hearing that
s. 7 of the Charter requires before the state deprives a person of life,
liberty or security of the person. I therefore conclude that the IRPA ’s
procedure for determining whether a certificate is reasonable does not conform
to the principles of fundamental justice as embodied in s. 7 of the Charter .
The same conclusion necessarily applies to the detention review procedures
under ss. 83 and 84 of the IRPA .
8. Is the Limit Justified Under Section 1 of
the Charter ?
66
The Charter does not guarantee rights absolutely. The state is
permitted to limit rights — including the s. 7 guarantee of life, liberty and
security — if it can establish that the limits are demonstrably justifiable in
a free and democratic society. This said, violations of s. 7 are not easily
saved by s. 1 . In Re B.C. Motor Vehicle Act, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 486, Lamer
J. (as he then was) stated, for the majority:
Section 1 may, for reasons of administrative expediency, successfully
come to the rescue of an otherwise violation of s. 7 , but only in cases arising
out of exceptional conditions, such as natural disasters, the outbreak of war,
epidemics, and the like. [p. 518]
The rights
protected by s. 7 — life, liberty, and security of the person — are basic to
our conception of a free and democratic society, and hence are not easily
overridden by competing social interests. It follows that violations of the
principles of fundamental justice, specifically the right to a fair hearing,
are difficult to justify under s. 1: G. (J.). Nevertheless, the task may
not be impossible, particularly in extraordinary circumstances where concerns
are grave and the challenges complex.
67
The test to be applied in determining whether a violation can be
justified under s. 1, known as the Oakes test (R. v. Oakes,
[1986] 1 S.C.R. 103), requires a pressing and substantial objective and
proportional means. A finding of proportionality requires: (a) means
rationally connected to the objective; (b) minimal impairment of rights;
and (c) proportionality between the effects of the infringement and the
importance of the objective.
68
The protection of Canada’s national security and related intelligence
sources undoubtedly constitutes a pressing and substantial objective.
Moreover, the IRPA ’s provisions regarding the non‑disclosure of
evidence at certificate hearings are rationally connected to this objective.
The facts on this point are undisputed. Canada is a net importer of security
information. This information is essential to the security and defence of
Canada, and disclosure would adversely affect its flow and quality: see Ruby.
This leaves the question whether the means Parliament has chosen, i.e. a
certificate procedure leading to detention and deportation of non-citizens on
the ground that they pose a threat to Canada’s security, minimally impairs the
rights of non‑citizens.
69
The realities that confront modern governments
faced with the challenge of terrorism are stark. In the interest of security,
it may be necessary to detain persons deemed to pose a threat. At the same
time, security concerns may preclude disclosure of the evidence on which the
detention is based. But these tensions are not new. As we shall see, Canada
has already devised processes that go further in preserving s. 7 rights while
protecting sensitive information; until recently, one of these solutions was
applicable in the security certificate context. Nor are these tensions unique
to Canada: in the specific context of anti-terrorism legislation, the United
Kingdom uses special counsel to provide a measure of protection to the detained
person’s interests, while preserving the confidentiality of information that
must be kept secret. These alternatives suggest that the IRPA regime,
which places on the judge the entire burden of protecting the person’s
interest, does not minimally impair the rights of non-citizens, and hence
cannot be saved under s. 1 of the Charter .
(a) Less Intrusive Alternatives
70
This is not the first time Canada has had to reconcile the demands of
national security with the procedural rights guaranteed by the Charter .
In a number of legal contexts, Canadian government institutions have found ways
to protect sensitive information while treating individuals fairly. In some
situations, the solution has involved the use of special counsel, in a manner
closely approximating an adversarial process.
71
The Security Intelligence Review Committee (“SIRC”) is an independent
review body that monitors the activities of the Canadian Security Intelligence
Service (“CSIS”). Established in 1984 under the Canadian Security
Intelligence Service Act, S.C. 1984, c. 21 (now R.S.C. 1985, c. C-23 ), SIRC
is composed of three to five members of the Privy Council who are not currently
serving in Parliament. Under the former Immigration Act, SIRC had the
power to vet findings of inadmissibility based on alleged threats to national
security; a ministerial certificate could not be issued without a SIRC
investigation. If the Minister of Employment and Immigration and the Solicitor
General were of the opinion that a non-citizen was inadmissible due to
involvement in organized crime, espionage, subversion, acts of violence, etc.,
they were first obliged to make a report to SIRC: Immigration Act, s.
39(2). SIRC would then investigate the grounds for the report, providing the
affected person with “a statement summarizing such information available to it
as will enable the person to be as fully informed as possible of the
circumstances giving rise to the report”: s. 39(6) . After completing its
investigation, SIRC would send a report to the Governor in Council containing
its recommendation as to whether a security certificate should be issued: s.
39(9) . A copy of the same report would be provided to the non-citizen: s.
39(10) . If the Governor in Council was satisfied that the non-citizen was inadmissible
on appropriate grounds, he or she could then direct the Minister of Employment
and Immigration to issue a security certificate: s. 40(1) .
72
Empowered to develop its own investigative procedures, SIRC established
a formal adversarial process, with “a court-like hearing room” and “procedures
that mirrored judicial proceedings as much as possible”. The process also
included an independent panel of lawyers with security clearances to act as
counsel to SIRC (M. Rankin, “The Security Intelligence Review Committee:
Reconciling National Security with Procedural Fairness” (1990), 3 C.J.A.L.P.
173, at p. 179).
73
A SIRC member presiding at a hearing had the discretion to balance
national security against procedural fairness in determining how much
information could be disclosed to the affected person. The non-citizen and his
or her counsel would normally be present in the hearing room, except when
sensitive national security evidence was tendered. (The presiding SIRC member
would decide whether to exclude the non-citizen during certain testimony.) At
such a juncture, independent, security-cleared SIRC counsel would act on behalf
of the non-citizen. The SIRC counsel were instructed to cross-examine
witnesses for CSIS “with as much vigour as one would expect from the
complainant’s counsel” (Rankin, at p. 184; SIRC Annual Report 1988-1989
(1989) (“SIRC Annual Report”), at p. 64). At the end of this ex
parte portion of the hearing, the excluded person would be brought back
into the room and provided with a summary, which would include “the gist of the
evidence, without disclosing the national security information” (SIRC Annual
Report, at p. 64). The SIRC counsel would negotiate the contents of the
summary with CSIS, under the supervision of the presiding SIRC member (ibid.).
The affected person and his or her counsel would then be allowed to ask their
own questions, and to cross-examine on the basis of the summary (Rankin, at p.
184).
74
In the words of Professor Rankin, SIRC’s procedures represented “an
attempt to preserve the best features of the adversarial process with its
insistence on vigorous cross-examination, but not to run afoul of the
requirements of national security” (p. 185). These procedures illustrate how
special counsel can provide not only an effective substitute for informed
participation, but can also help bolster actual informed participation by the
affected person. Since the special counsel had a role in determining how much
information would be included in the summary, disclosure was presumably more
complete than would otherwise have been the case. Sensitive national security
information was still protected, but the executive was required to justify the
breadth of this protection.
75
In 1988 Parliament added s. 40.1 to the Immigration
Act to empower the Minister and the Solicitor General to issue security
certificates in respect of foreign nationals. Section 40.1 effectively bypassed
the SIRC investigation process where foreign nationals were concerned, instead
referring the certificate to a designated judge of the Federal Court for
subsequent review. Security certificates in respect of permanent residents
remained subject to SIRC scrutiny until 2002, when Parliament repealed the Immigration
Act and replaced it with the IRPA .
76
Certain elements of SIRC process may be inappropriate to the context of
terrorism. Where there is a risk of catastrophic acts of violence, it would be
foolhardy to require a lengthy review process before a certificate could
be issued. But it was not suggested before this Court that SIRC’s special
counsel system had not functioned well in connection with the review of
certificates under the Immigration Act, nor was any explanation
given for why, under the new system for vetting certificates and reviewing
detentions, a special counsel process had not been retained.
77
The SIRC process is not the only example of the Canadian legal system
striking a better balance between the protection of sensitive information and
the procedural rights of individuals. A current example is found in the Canada Evidence Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-5 (“CEA ”),
which permits the government to object to the disclosure of information on
grounds of public interest, in proceedings to which the Act applies: ss. 37 to
39 . Under the recent amendments to the CEA set out in the Anti-terrorism
Act, S.C. 2001, c. 41 , a participant in a proceeding who is required
to disclose or expects to disclose potentially injurious or sensitive
information, or who believes that such information might be disclosed, must
notify the Attorney General about the potential disclosure, and the Attorney
General may then apply to the Federal Court for an order prohibiting the
disclosure of the information: ss. 38.01 , 38.02 , 38.04 . The judge enjoys
considerable discretion in deciding whether the information should be
disclosed. If the judge concludes that disclosure of the information would be
injurious to international relations, national defence or national security,
but that the public interest in disclosure outweighs in importance the public
interest in non-disclosure, the judge may order the disclosure of all or part
of the information, on such conditions as he or she sees fit. No similar
residual discretion exists under the IRPA , which requires judges not to
disclose information the disclosure of which would be injurious to national
security or to the safety of any person. Moreover, the CEA makes no
provision for the use of information that has not been disclosed. While the CEA
does not address the same problems as the IRPA , and hence is of
limited assistance here, it illustrates Parliament’s concern under other
legislation for striking a sensitive balance between the need for protection of
confidential information and the rights of the individual.
78
Crown and defence counsel in the recent Air
India trial (R. v. Malik, [2005] B.C.J. No. 521 (QL), 2005 BCSC 350)
were faced with the task of managing security and intelligence information and
attempting to protect procedural fairness. The Crown was in possession of the
fruits of a 17-year-long investigation into the terrorist bombing of a
passenger aircraft and a related explosion in Narita, Japan. It withheld
material on the basis of relevance, national security privilege and litigation
privilege. Crown and defence counsel came to an agreement under which defence
counsel obtained consents from their clients to conduct a preliminary review of
the withheld material, on written undertakings not to disclose the material to
anyone, including the client. Disclosure in a specific trial, to a select group
of counsel on undertakings, may not provide a working model for general
deportation legislation that must deal with a wide variety of counsel in a host
of cases. Nevertheless, the procedures adopted in the Air India trial suggest
that a search should be made for a less intrusive solution than the one found
in the IRPA .
79
The Arar Inquiry provides another example of the use of special
counsel in Canada. The Commission had to examine confidential information
related to the investigation of terrorism plots while preserving Mr. Arar’s and
the public’s interest in disclosure. The Commission was governed by the CEA .
To help assess claims for confidentiality, the
Commissioner was assisted by independent security-cleared legal counsel with a
background in security and intelligence, whose role was to act as amicus
curiae on confidentiality applications. The scheme’s aim was to ensure
that only information that was rightly subject to national security
confidentiality was kept from public view. There is no indication that these
procedures increased the risk of disclosure of protected information.
80
Finally, I note the special advocate system employed by the Special
Immigration Appeals Commission (“SIAC”) in the United Kingdom. SIAC and the
special advocate system were created in response to Chahal v. United Kingdom,
15 November 1996, Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1996-V, p. 1831, in
which the European Court of Human Rights had held that the procedure then in
place was inadequate. The court in Chahal commented favourably on the
idea of security‑cleared counsel instructed by the court, identifying it
as being Canadian in origin (perhaps referring to the procedure developed by
SIRC).
81
The U.K.’s special advocate system resembles the Canadian SIRC model.
Section 6(1) of the Special Immigration Appeals Commission Act 1997
(U.K.), 1997, c. 68, states that the special advocate is appointed to
“represent the interests of an appellant” in any proceedings before SIAC from
which the appellant and his or her legal representatives are excluded. Section
6(4), however, specifies that the special advocate “shall not be responsible to
the person whose interests he is appointed to represent”. Rule 35 of the Special
Immigration Appeals Commission (Procedure) Rules 2003, S.I. 2003/1034, sets
out the special advocate’s three main functions: (1) to make submissions to the
Commission at any hearings from which the appellant and the appellant’s
representatives are excluded; (2) to cross-examine witnesses at any such
hearings; and (3) to make written submissions to the Commission. After seeing
the protected information, the special advocate may not communicate with the
appellant or the appellant’s representative without authorization from the
Commission: rule 36. If the special advocate requests such authorization, the
Commission gives the Secretary of State an opportunity to object to the
proposed communication before deciding whether to authorize it: rule 38.
82
The use of special advocates has received widespread support in Canadian
academic commentary. Professor Roach, for example, criticizes the Court of
Appeal’s conclusion in Charkaoui (Re), 2004 FCA 421, that such a measure
is not constitutionally required:
In my view, this approach was in error because in camera and ex
parte hearings offend basic notions of a fair hearing and special
advocates constitute one example of an approach that is a more proportionate
response to reconciling the need to keep some information secret and the need
to ensure as much fairness and adversarial challenge as possible. [Emphasis
added.]
(K. Roach, “Ten Ways to Improve Canadian Anti-Terrorism Law” (2006), 51
Crim. L.Q. 102, at p. 120)
83
This said, the U.K.’s special advocate system has also been criticized
for not going far enough. In April 2005, the House of Commons Constitutional
Affairs Committee published a report on the operation of SIAC and the use of
special advocates (The operation of the Special Immigration Appeals
Commission (SIAC) and the use of Special Advocates). The Committee listed
three important disadvantages faced by special advocates: (1) once they have
seen the confidential material, they cannot, subject to narrow exceptions, take
instructions from the appellant or the appellant’s counsel; (2) they lack the
resources of an ordinary legal team, for the purpose of conducting in secret a
full defence; and (3) they have no power to call witnesses (para. 52).
84
Despite these difficulties, SIAC itself has commented favourably on the
assistance provided by special advocates, stating that as a result of the
“rigorous cross-examination” of the government’s evidence by the special
advocate, it was satisfied that the government’s assertions were unsupported by
the evidence (M. v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, [2004]
UKSIAC 17/2002 (BAILII), March 8, 2004, at para. 10). The England and Wales
Court of Appeal upheld SIAC’s decision: [2004] 2 All E.R. 863, [2004] EWCA Civ
324.
(b) The IRPA Scheme Does Not Minimally Impair
the Named Person’s Rights
85
Parliament is not required to use the perfect, or least
restrictive, alternative to achieve its objective: R. v. Chaulk, [1990]
3 S.C.R. 1303. However, bearing in mind the deference that is owed to
Parliament in its legislative choices, the alternatives discussed demonstrate
that the IRPA does not minimally impair the named person’s rights.
86
Under the IRPA , the government
effectively decides what can be disclosed to the named person. Not only is the
named person not shown the information and not permitted to participate in
proceedings involving it, but no one but the judge may look at the information
with a view to protecting the named person’s interests. Why the drafters of
the legislation did not provide for special counsel to objectively review the
material with a view to protecting the named person’s interest, as was formerly
done for the review of security certificates by SIRC and is presently done in
the United Kingdom, has not been explained. The special counsel system may not
be perfect from the named person’s perspective, given that special counsel
cannot reveal confidential material. But, without compromising security, it
better protects the named person’s s. 7 interests.
87
I conclude that the IRPA ’s procedures for determining
whether a certificate is reasonable and for detention review cannot be
justified as minimal impairments of the individual’s right to a judicial
determination on the facts and the law and right to know and meet the case.
Mechanisms developed in Canada and abroad illustrate that the government can do
more to protect the individual while keeping critical information confidential
than it has done in the IRPA . Precisely what more should be done is a
matter for Parliament to decide. But it is clear that more must be done to
meet the requirements of a free and democratic society.
B. Does the Detention of Permanent Residents
or Foreign Nationals Under the IRPA Infringe Sections 7, 9, 10(c) or 12 of the
Charter , and if so, Are the Infringements Justified Under Section 1 of the
Charter ?
1. Time Constraints on Review
for Foreign Nationals: Breach of Section 9 or Section 10(c)?
88
Section 9 of the Charter guarantees
freedom from arbitrary detention. This guarantee expresses one of the most
fundamental norms of the rule of law. The state may not detain arbitrarily,
but only in accordance with the law. The appellant Mr. Almrei argues that detention
under the IRPA is arbitrary with respect to foreign nationals, first
because it permits their detention without warrant and without regard to their
personal circumstances, and second because it prevents review until 120 days
after the certificate is confirmed. In both respects, foreign nationals are
treated differently than permanent residents.
89
I would reject Mr. Almrei’s argument that automatic detention of foreign
nationals is arbitrary because it is effected without regard to the personal
circumstances of the detainee. Detention is not arbitrary where there are
“standards that are rationally related to the purpose of the power of
detention”: P. W. Hogg, Constitutional Law of Canada (loose-leaf ed.),
vol. 2, at p. 46-5. The triggering event for the detention of a foreign
national is the signing of a certificate stating that the foreign national is
inadmissible on grounds of security, violating human or international rights,
serious criminality or organized criminality. The security ground is based on
the danger posed by the named person, and therefore provides a rational
foundation for the detention. R. v. Swain, [1991] 1 S.C.R.
933, in which this Court struck down a provision of the Criminal Code
requiring that an accused acquitted of an offence on the basis of an insanity
defence be detained automatically without a hearing, is distinguishable. The
Court held that it was arbitrary to require the detention of persons acquitted
by reason of mental disorder without the application of any standard
whatsoever, because “[n]ot all of these individuals will be dangerous”: at p.
1013, per Lamer C.J. But in the national security context, the signature
of a certificate under s. 77 of the IRPA on the ground of security is
necessarily related to the dangerousness of the individual. While not all the
other grounds for the issuance of a certificate under s. 77(1) are conclusive
of the danger posed by the named person, danger is not the only constitutional
basis upon which an individual can be detained, and arbitrariness of detention
under the other grounds was not argued.
90
This leaves Mr. Almrei’s argument that the IRPA imposes arbitrary
detention because it prevents review of the detention of foreign nationals until
120 days after the certificate is confirmed. Whether through habeas corpus
or statutory mechanisms, foreign nationals, like others, have a right to prompt
review to ensure that their detention complies with the law. This principle is
affirmed in s. 10 (c) of the Charter . It is also recognized
internationally: see Rasul v. Bush, 542 U.S. 466 (2004); Zadvydas
v. Davis, 533 U.S. 678 (2001); art. 5 of the Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, 213 U.N.T.S. 221 (“European
Convention on Human Rights”); Slivenko v. Latvia [GC], No. 48321/99,
ECHR 2003-X, p. 229. While the government accepts this principle, it argues
that the 120-day period in s. 84(2) is sufficiently prompt, relying, as did the
courts below, on the fact that foreign nationals can apply for release and
depart from Canada at any time.
91
The lack of review for foreign nationals until 120 days after the
reasonableness of the certificate has been judicially determined violates the
guarantee against arbitrary detention in s. 9 of the Charter , a
guarantee which encompasses the right to prompt review of detention under s.
10 (c) of the Charter . Permanent residents named in certificates
are entitled to an automatic review within 48 hours. The same time frame for
review of detention applies to both permanent residents and foreign nationals
under s. 57 of the IRPA . And under the Criminal Code , a person
who is arrested with or without a warrant is to be brought before a judge
within 24 hours, or as soon as possible: s. 503(1) . These provisions indicate
the seriousness with which the deprivation of liberty is viewed, and offer
guidance as to acceptable delays before this deprivation is reviewed.
92
The government submits that the detention
provisions, and more specifically the absence of review for foreign nationals
until 120 days after the certificate has been determined to be reasonable,
reflect its objective of creating a timely removal process for individuals
thought to constitute a danger to national security, and asserts that when the
provisions were drafted, it was thought that the removal process would be so
fast that there would be no need for review. This is more an admission of the
excessiveness of the 120-day period than a justification.
93
It is clear that there may be a need for some flexibility regarding the
period for which a suspected terrorist may be detained. Confronted with a
terrorist threat, state officials may need to act immediately, in the absence
of a fully documented case. It may take some time to verify and document the
threat. Where state officials act expeditiously, the failure to meet an
arbitrary target of a fixed number of hours should not mean the automatic
release of the person, who may well be dangerous. However, this cannot justify
the complete denial of a timely detention review. Permanent
residents who pose a danger to national security are also meant to be removed
expeditiously. If this objective can be pursued while providing permanent
residents with a mandatory detention review within 48 hours, then how can a
denial of review for foreign nationals for 120 days after the certificate is
confirmed be considered a minimal impairment?
94
I conclude that the lack of timely review of the detention of foreign
nationals violates s. 9 and s. 10 (c) and cannot be saved by s. 1.
2. Do Extended Periods of Detention Under the
Scheme Violate Section 7 or the Section 12 Guarantee Against Cruel and Unusual
Treatment?
95
The question at this point is whether the extended detention
that may occur under the IRPA violates the guarantee against cruel and
unusual treatment under s. 12 of the Charter . The threshold for breach
of s. 12 is high. As stated by Lamer J. in Smith, treatment or
punishment is cruel and unusual if it is “so excessive as to outrage [our]
standards of decency”: R. v. Smith, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 1045, at p. 1067;
also R. v. Wiles, [2005] 3 S.C.R. 895, 2005 SCC 84, at para. 4.
96
The s. 12 issue of cruel and unusual treatment is intertwined with s. 7
considerations, since the indefiniteness of detention, as well as the
psychological stress it may cause, is related to the mechanisms available to
the detainee to regain liberty. It is not the detention itself, or even its
length, that is objectionable. Detention itself is never pleasant, but it is
only cruel and unusual in the legal sense if it violates accepted norms of
treatment. Denying the means required by the principles of fundamental justice
to challenge a detention may render the detention arbitrarily indefinite and
support the argument that it is cruel or unusual. (The same may be true of
onerous conditions of release that seriously restrict a person’s liberty
without affording an opportunity to challenge the restrictions.) Conversely, a
system that permits the detainee to challenge the detention and obtain a
release if one is justified may lead to the conclusion that the detention is
not cruel and unusual: see Sahin v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [1995] 1 F.C. 214 (T.D.), per Rothstein J. (as
he then was).
97
Mr. Almrei’s first submission is that “the combination of the
legislative scheme and the conditions of detention . . . [transforms] the
Appellant’s detention into one that is cruel and unusual”. I would reject this
submission. This Court has not, in its past decisions,
recognized s. 12 as a mechanism to challenge the overall fairness of a
particular legislative regime.
98
More narrowly, however, it has been recognized that indefinite
detention in circumstances where the detainee has no hope of release or
recourse to a legal process to procure his or her release may cause
psychological stress and therefore constitute cruel and unusual treatment: Eur.
Court H.R., Soering case, judgment of 7 July 1989, Series A, No. 161, at
para. 111; compare Lyons, at pp. 339-41. However, for the reasons that
follow, I conclude that the IRPA does not impose cruel and unusual
treatment within the meaning of s. 12 of the Charter because, although
detentions may be lengthy, the IRPA , properly interpreted, provides a
process for reviewing detention and obtaining release and for reviewing and
amending conditions of release, where appropriate.
99
On its face, the IRPA permits detention pending
deportation on security grounds. In reality, however, a
release from detention may be difficult to obtain. The Federal Court suggested
that Mr. Almrei “holds the key to his release”: Almrei v. Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), [2004] 4 F.C.R. 327, 2004 FC 420, at para.
138. But voluntary departure may be impossible. A person named in a
certificate of inadmissibility may have nowhere to go. Other countries may
assume such a person to be a terrorist and are likely to refuse entry, or the
person may fear torture on his or her return. Deportation may fail for the
same reasons, despite the observation that “[i]n our jurisdiction, at this
moment, deportation to torture remains a possibility” in exceptional circumstances:
Almrei, 2005 FCA 54, at para. 127. The only realistic option may be
judicial release.
100
In the case of a permanent resident, detention
is continued if the judge is satisfied that the person “continues to be a
danger to national security or to the safety of any person, or is unlikely to
appear at a proceeding or for removal”: s. 83(3). The ministers bear the
initial burden of establishing that these criteria are met: Charkaoui (Re),
[2004] 1 F.C.R. 528, 2003 FC 882, at para. 36. In the case of a foreign
national, release may be granted if the judge is “satisfied that the foreign
national will not be removed from Canada within a reasonable time and that the
release will not pose a danger to national security or to the safety of any
person”: s. 84(2). Unlike s. 83(3), s. 84(2) places the onus on the
detainee: see Ahani v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (2000),
24 Admin. L.R. (3d) 171 (F.C.A.).
101
Courts thus far have understood these provisions
to set a high standard for release. In interpreting the predecessor to s. 84(2)
under the Immigration Act, the Federal Court of Appeal held that
judicial release “cannot be an automatic or easy thing to achieve”, and that it
“is not to be routinely obtained”: Ahani, at para. 13. At the same
time, courts have read the provision as allowing the judge to inquire whether
terms and conditions could make the release safe. This is an invitation that
Federal Court judges have rightly accepted: Harkat v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) [2007] 1 F.C.R. 321, 2006 FC 628, at para. 82;
Almrei v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (2005), 270
F.T.R. 1, 2005 FC 1645, at paras. 419-26. Likewise, when reviewing the
detention of a permanent resident under s. 83(3), judges have examined the
context that would surround release in order to determine whether the person
would pose a security risk: Charkaoui (Re), 2005 FC 248, at paras.
71-73.
102
The cases at bar illustrate the difficulty that
may be encountered in seeking release from a detention imposed under the IRPA .
At the time of writing, Mr. Almrei, a foreign national, has been detained
for over five years. He cannot be deported until the Minister issues an
opinion that he constitutes a danger to the public. But two “danger opinions”
have already been quashed by the Federal Court, the last one in March 2005.
The Minister has yet to issue a new one. In dismissing Mr. Almrei’s
application for judicial release, Layden-Stevenson J. held that Mr. Almrei had
established that his removal was not imminent, was not a “done deal” and would
not occur within a reasonable time (para. 272). However, she held that she was
compelled to keep him in detention because she found that his release would
pose a danger to national security under s. 84(2) : Almrei, 2005 FC
1645. Mr. Almrei argues that as far as he is concerned, his detention is
indefinite.
103
Mr. Harkat has been released from detention, but remains under house
arrest and continuous surveillance by the Canada Border Services Agency
(“CBSA”) and the RCMP by virtue of an order by Dawson J. He must at all times
wear an electronic monitoring device and obtain the CBSA’s permission before
leaving his house. He must at all times be under the supervision of either his
wife or his mother-in-law. Access to his residence is restricted to
individuals who have posted sureties and to Mr. Harkat’s legal counsel, as well
as to emergency, fire, police and health care professionals. The CBSA is
permitted to intercept all telephone and oral communications between
Mr. Harkat and any third party. Mr. Harkat is forbidden to use any
cellular phone or any computer with Internet connectivity. Breach of any of
the numerous conditions in Dawson J.’s order would lead to automatic rearrest;
however, these conditions are subject to ongoing review and amendment. The
government is attempting to deport him to Algeria; whether this is possible may
depend on the outcome of legal processes that are still pending.
104
Mr. Charkaoui has been released from detention
under conditions that are somewhat less onerous: Charkaoui (Re), 2005 FC
248, at para. 86. These conditions have a serious impact on his liberty, and
he remains in jeopardy of being rearrested for a breach of his conditions. But
the conditions are subject to ongoing review and have been amended several
times subsequent to his release. More legal avenues remain to be explored.
Whether the government will seek to deport Mr. Charkaoui or detain him anew may
depend on the outcome of his application for protection and the determination
of the reasonableness of his certificate.
105
It is thus clear that while the IRPA in principle imposes
detention only pending deportation, it may in fact permit lengthy and
indeterminate detention or lengthy periods subject to onerous release
conditions. The next question is whether this violates s. 7 or s. 12 based on
the applicable legal principles.
106
This Court has previously considered the
possibility of indefinite detention in the criminal context. In Lyons, a
majority of the Court held that “dangerous offender” legislation allowing for
indefinite detention did not constitute cruel and unusual treatment or
punishment within the meaning of s. 12 of the Charter because the
statutory scheme includes a parole process that “ensures that incarceration is
imposed for only as long as the circumstances of the individual case require”
(p. 341, per La Forest J.). It is true that a judge can impose the
dangerous offender designation only on a person who has been convicted of a
serious personal injury offence; this Court indicated that a sentence of
indeterminate detention, applied with respect to a future crime or a crime that
had already been punished, would violate s. 7 of the Charter (pp.
327-28, per La Forest J.). But the use in criminal law of indeterminate
detention as a tool of sentencing — serving both a punitive and a preventive
function — does not establish the constitutionality of preventive detention
measures in the immigration context.
107
The principles underlying Lyons must be
adapted in the case at bar to the immigration context, which requires a period
of time for review of the named person’s right to remain in Canada.
Drawing on them, I conclude that the s. 7 principles of
fundamental justice and the s. 12 guarantee of freedom from cruel and unusual
treatment require that, where a person is detained or is subject to onerous
conditions of release for an extended period under immigration law, the
detention or the conditions must be accompanied by a meaningful process of
ongoing review that takes into account the context and circumstances of the
individual case. Such persons must have meaningful opportunities to challenge their
continued detention or the conditions of their release.
108
The type of process required has been explored
in cases involving analogous situations. In Sahin, Rothstein J. had
occasion to examine a situation of ongoing detention (for reasons unrelated to
national security) under the Immigration Act. He concluded that “what
amounts to an indefinite detention for a lengthy period of time may, in an
appropriate case, constitute a deprivation of liberty that is not in accordance
with the principles of fundamental justice” (p. 229) and held that ongoing
detention under the Immigration Act could be constitutional if it
resulted from the weighing of a number of factors (at pp. 231-32):
The following list, which, of course, is not
exhaustive of all considerations, seems to me to at least address the more
obvious [considerations]. Needless to say, the considerations relevant to a
specific case, and the weight to be placed upon them, will depend upon the
circumstances of the case.
(1) Reasons for the detention, i.e. is the applicant
considered a danger to the public or is there a concern that he would not
appear for removal. I would think that there is a stronger case for continuing
a long detention when an individual is considered a danger to the public.
(2) Length of time in detention and length of time
detention will likely continue. If an individual has been held in detention for
some time as in the case at bar, and a further lengthy detention is
anticipated, or if future detention time cannot be ascertained, I would think
that these facts would tend to favour release.
(3) Has the applicant or the respondent caused any
delay or has either not been as diligent as reasonably possible. Unexplained
delay and even unexplained lack of diligence should count against the offending
party.
(4) The availability, effectiveness and
appropriateness of alternatives to detention such as outright release, bail
bond, periodic reporting, confinement to a particular location or geographic
area, the requirement to report changes of address or telephone numbers,
detention in a form that could be less restrictive to the individual, etc.
A consideration that I think
deserves significant weight is the amount of time that is anticipated until a
final decision, determining, one way or the other, whether the applicant may
remain in Canada or must leave.
109
Factors regarding release are considered in
another part of the IRPA and the accompanying Immigration and Refugee
Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227 (“IRP Regulations”). When a
non-citizen not named in a certificate is detained because he or she is
inadmissible and also is a danger to the public or is unlikely to appear for
examination, the non-citizen is entitled to detention reviews before the
Immigration and Refugee Board: IRPA, ss. 55 to 57 . In determining
whether the non-citizen should be held or released, the Board must take into
account “prescribed factors”: (a) the reason for detention; (b) the length of
time in detention; (c) whether there are any elements that can assist in determining
the length of time that detention is likely to continue and, if so, that length
of time; (d) any unexplained delays or unexplained lack of diligence caused by
the Department or the person concerned; and (e) the existence of alternatives
to detention (s. 58 IRPA and r. 248 IRP Regulations).
110
I conclude that extended periods of detention
under the certificate provisions of the IRPA do not violate ss. 7 and 12
of the Charter if accompanied by a process that provides regular
opportunities for review of detention, taking into account all relevant
factors, including the following:
(a) Reasons for Detention
111
The criteria for signing a certificate are
“security, violating human or international rights, serious criminality or
organized criminality” (s. 77 ). Detention pursuant to a certificate is
justified on the basis of a continuing threat to national security or to the
safety of any person. While the criteria for release under s. 83 of the IRPA
also include the likelihood that a person will appear at a proceeding or
for removal, a threat to national security or to the safety of a person is a
more important factor for the purpose of justifying continued detention. The
more serious the threat, the greater will be the justification for detention.
(b) Length of Detention
112
The length of the detention to date is an
important factor, both from the perspective of the individual and from the
perspective of national security. The longer the period, the less likely that
an individual will remain a threat to security: “The imminence of danger may
decline with the passage of time”: Charkaoui (Re), 2005 FC 248,
at para. 74. Noël J. concluded that Mr. Charkaoui could be released safely
from detention because his long period of detention had cut him off from
whatever associations with extremist groups he may have had. Likewise, in Mr.
Harkat’s case, Dawson J. based her decision to release Mr. Harkat in part on
the fact that the long period of detention meant that “his ability to
communicate with persons in the Islamic extremist network has been disrupted”: Harkat,
2006 FC 628, at para. 86.
113
A longer period of detention would also signify
that the government would have had more time to gather evidence establishing
the nature of the threat posed by the detained person. While the government’s
evidentiary onus may not be heavy at the initial detention review (see above,
at para. 93), it must be heavier when the government has had more time to
investigate and document the threat.
(c) Reasons for the Delay in Deportation
114
When reviewing detentions pending deportation,
judges have assessed whether the delays have been caused by the detainees or
the government: Sahin, at p. 231. In reviewing Mr. Almrei’s
application for release, the Federal Court of Appeal stated that a reviewing
judge could “discount, in whole or in part, the delay resulting from
proceedings resorted to by an applicant that have the precise effect of
preventing compliance by the Crown with the law within a reasonable time”: Almrei,
2005 FCA 54, at para. 58; see also Harkat, 2006 FC 628, at para. 30.
Recourse by the government or the individual to applicable provisions of the IRPA
that are reasonable in the circumstances and recourse by the individual to
reasonable Charter challenges should not count against either party. On
the other hand, an unexplained delay or lack of diligence should count against
the offending party.
(d) Anticipated Future
Length of Detention
115
If there will be a lengthy detention before
deportation or if the future detention time cannot be ascertained, this is a
factor that weighs in favour of release.
(e) Availability of
Alternatives to Detention
116
Stringent release conditions, such as those imposed
on Mr. Charkaoui and Mr. Harkat, seriously limit individual liberty. However,
they are less severe than incarceration. Alternatives to lengthy detention
pursuant to a certificate, such as stringent release conditions, must not be a
disproportionate response to the nature of the threat.
117
In other words, there must be detention reviews on a regular basis, at
which times the reviewing judge should be able to look at all factors relevant
to the justice of continued detention, including the possibility of the IRPA ’s
detention provisions being misused or abused. Analogous principles apply to
extended periods of release subject to onerous or restrictive conditions:
these conditions must be subject to ongoing, regular review under a review
process that takes into account all the above factors, including the existence
of alternatives to the conditions.
118
Do the provisions for review of detention under
the IRPA ’s certificate scheme satisfy these requirements? To answer
this question, we must examine ss. 83(3) and 84(2) in greater detail.
119
Section 84(2) governs the release of foreign
nationals. It requires the judge to consider whether the “release” of the
detainee would pose a danger to security. This implies that the judge can
consider terms and conditions that would neutralize the danger. The judge, if
satisfied that the danger no longer exists or that it can be neutralized by
conditions, may order the release.
120
Section 83(3), which applies to permanent
residents, has a slightly different wording. It requires the judge to consider
not whether the release would pose a danger as under s. 84(2), but
whether the permanent resident continues to be a danger. An issue may
arise as to whether this difference in wording affects the ability of the judge
to fashion conditions and hence to order conditional release. In my view, there
is no practical difference between saying a person’s release would be a danger
and saying that the person is a danger. I therefore read s. 83(3), like s.
84(2), as enabling the judge to consider whether any danger attendant on
release can be mitigated by conditions.
121
On this basis, I conclude that for both foreign
nationals and permanent residents, the IRPA ’s certificate scheme
provides a mechanism for review of detention, which permits the reviewing judge
to fashion conditions that would neutralize the risk of danger upon release,
and hence to order the release of the detainee.
122
Reviewing judges have also developed a practice of periodic review in
connection with release procedures: Charkaoui (Re), 2005 FC 248, at
para. 86. In the immigration context, such periodic reviews must be understood
to be required by ss. 7 and 12 of the Charter . The Federal Court of
Appeal has suggested that once a foreign national has brought an application
for release under s. 84(2) , he or she cannot bring a new application except on
the basis of (i) new evidence or (ii) a material change in circumstances since
the previous application: Almrei, 2005 FCA 54; see also, Ahani,
at paras. 14-15. Such an interpretation would lead to a holding that s. 84(2)
is inconsistent with ss. 7 and 12 ; however, since s. 84(2) has already been
found to infringe s. 9 and cannot be saved under s. 1 , it is not necessary to
decide this issue.
123
In summary, the IRPA , interpreted in
conformity with the Charter , permits robust ongoing judicial review of
the continued need for and justice of the detainee’s detention pending
deportation. On this basis, I conclude that extended periods of detention pending
deportation under the certificate provisions of the IRPA do not violate
s. 7 or s. 12 of the Charter , provided that reviewing courts adhere to
the guidelines set out above. Thus, the IRPA procedure itself is not
unconstitutional on this ground. However, this does not preclude the
possibility of a judge concluding at a certain point that a particular
detention constitutes cruel and unusual treatment or is inconsistent with the
principles of fundamental justice, and therefore infringes the Charter
in a manner that is remediable under s. 24(1) of the Charter .
124
These conclusions are consistent with English and American authority.
Canada, it goes without saying, is not alone in facing the problem of detention
in the immigration context in situations where deportation is difficult or
impossible. Courts in the United Kingdom and the United States have suggested
that detention in this context can be used only during the period where it is
reasonably necessary for deportation purposes: R. v. Governor
of Durham Prison, ex parte Singh, [1984] 1 All E.R. 983 (Q.B.); Zadvydas.
125
A case raising similar issues is the decision of the
House of Lords in A. v. Secretary of State for the Home Department,
[2005] 3 All E.R. 169, [2004] UKHL 56 (“Re A”). This was an appeal
brought by nine foreign nationals who were suspected of involvement in
terrorism, but were not charged with any crime. The United Kingdom government
sought to deport them, but in most cases this was impossible due to a risk of
torture. So most of the individuals were detained at Belmarsh Prison under s.
23 of the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001 (U.K.), 2001, c.
24. This provision empowered the government to detain suspected international
terrorists under the provisions governing detention pending deportation,
despite the fact that removal from the United Kingdom was temporarily or
indefinitely prevented, in derogation from art. 5 of the European Convention
on Human Rights: see Chahal.
126
The government claimed that this derogation was necessary to combat the
national security threat posed by Al-Qaeda terrorists. The
House of Lords, by a majority of 8 to 1, accepted that Al-Qaeda terrorism
represented a serious threat to the life of the nation, but seven of the eight
Lords who accepted this premise nevertheless concluded that s. 23 was not
strictly required by the exigencies of the situation. These same seven Lords
also concluded that s. 23 was incompatible with art. 14 of the European
Convention on Human Rights, because of the way it discriminated between
nationals and non-nationals. The derogation permitting permanent detention of
non-nationals treated them more harshly than nationals. Absent the possibility
of deportation, it lost its character as an immigration provision, and hence
constituted unlawful discrimination.
127
The finding in Re A of breach of the detention norms under
the European Convention on Human Rights was predicated on the U.K. Act’s
authorization of permanent detention. The IRPA, unlike
the U.K. legislation under consideration in Re A, does not authorize
indefinite detention and, interpreted as suggested above, provides an effective
review process that meets the requirements of Canadian law.
128
The fairness of the detention review procedure arises as an independent
issue. I concluded above that this procedure, like the certificate
determination procedure, denies the right to a fair hearing and does so in a
way that does not minimally impair the detainee’s rights. For the reasons given
earlier, Parliament must therefore revisit the provisions for detention review
in order to meaningfully protect the procedural rights of detainees.
C. Do the Certificate and Detention Review
Procedures Discriminate Between Citizens and Non-Citizens, Contrary to Section
15 of the Charter , and if so, Is the Discrimination Justified Under Section 1
of the Charter ?
129
The appellant Mr. Charkaoui argues that the IRPA certificate
scheme discriminates against non‑citizens, contrary to s. 15(1) of the Charter .
However, s. 6 of the Charter specifically allows for differential
treatment of citizens and non‑citizens in deportation matters: only
citizens are accorded the right to enter, remain in and leave Canada (s.
6(1)). A deportation scheme that applies to non‑citizens, but not to
citizens, does not, for that reason alone, violate s. 15 of the Charter :
Chiarelli.
130
It is argued that while this is so, there are
two ways in which the IRPA could, in some circumstances, result in
discrimination. First, detention may become indefinite as deportation is put
off or becomes impossible, for example because there is no country to which the
person can be deported. Second, the government could conceivably use the IRPA
not for the purpose of deportation, but to detain the person on security
grounds. In both situations, the source of the problem is that the detention
is no longer related, in effect or purpose, to the goal of deportation. In Re
A, the legislation considered by the House of Lords expressly provided for
indefinite detention; this was an important factor leading to the majority’s
holding that the legislation went beyond the concerns of immigration
legislation and thus wrongfully discriminated between nationals and
non-nationals: paras. 54, 81, 134, 157-58, 180 and 229.
131
Even though the detention of some of the
appellants has been long — indeed, Mr. Almrei’s continues — the record on which
we must rely does not establish that the detentions at issue have become
unhinged from the state’s purpose of deportation. More generally, the answer
to these concerns lies in an effective review process that permits the judge to
consider all matters relevant to the detention, as discussed earlier in these
reasons.
132
I conclude that a breach of s. 15 of the Charter
has not been established.
D. Are the IRPA
Certificate Provisions Inconsistent With the Constitutional Principle of the
Rule of Law?
133
The appellant Mr. Charkaoui claims that the unwritten constitutional
principle of the rule of law is infringed by two aspects of the IRPA scheme:
the unavailability of an appeal of the designated judge’s determination that
the certificate is reasonable; and the provision in s. 82 for the issuance
of an arrest warrant by the executive (in the case of a permanent resident) or
for mandatory arrest without a warrant following an executive decision (in the
case of a foreign national).
134
The rule of law incorporates a number of themes. Most fundamentally, it
requires government officials to exercise their authority according to law, and
not arbitrarily: Roncarelli v. Duplessis, [1959] S.C.R. 121; Reference
re Manitoba Language Rights, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 721, at p. 748-49. It
requires the creation and maintenance of an actual order of positive laws: Reference
re Manitoba Language Rights. And it is linked to the principle of judicial
independence: Reference re Remuneration of Judges of the Provincial Court of
Prince Edward Island.
135
Mr. Charkaoui’s claim is based not on any of these themes, but on the
content of the IRPA . But as this Court held in British Columbia v.
Imperial Tobacco Canada Ltd., [2005] 2 S.C.R. 473, 2005 SCC 49, “it is
difficult to conceive of how the rule of law could be used as a basis for
invalidating legislation . . . based on its content” (para. 59). Even if
this dictum leaves room for exceptions, Mr. Charkaoui has not established that
the IRPA should be one of them.
136
First, Mr. Charkaoui argues that the rule of law is violated by the
unavailability of an appeal of the judge’s determination of the reasonableness
of the certificate. But there is no constitutional right to an appeal (Kourtessis
v. M.N.R., [1993] 2 S.C.R. 53); nor can such a right be said to flow from
the rule of law in this context. The Federal Court is a superior court, not an
administrative tribunal: Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F‑7,
s. 4 . Federal Court judges, when reviewing certificates under the IRPA ,
have all the powers of Federal Court judges and exercise their powers
judicially. Moreover, the Federal Court of Appeal has reinforced the legality
of the process by holding that it is appropriate to circumvent the s. 80(3)
privative clause where the constitutionality of legislation is challenged (Charkaoui
(Re), 2004 FCA 421, at paras. 47‑50) or where the named person
alleges bias on the part of the designated judge (Zündel, Re (2004), 331
N.R. 180, 2004 FCA 394).
137
Second, Mr. Charkaoui argues that the rule of law is violated by the
provision for arrest under a warrant issued by the executive (in the case of a
permanent resident) or for automatic detention without a warrant (in the case
of a foreign national). But the rule of law does not categorically prohibit
automatic detention or detention on the basis of an executive decision. The
constitutional protections surrounding arrest and detention are set out in the Charter ,
and it is hard to see what the rule of law could add to these provisions.
IV. Conclusion
138
The scheme set up under Division 9 of Part 1 of the IRPA suffers
from two defects that are inconsistent with the Charter .
139
The first is that s. 78(g) allows for the
use of evidence that is never disclosed to the named person without providing
adequate measures to compensate for this non-disclosure and the constitutional
problems it causes. It is clear from approaches adopted in other democracies,
and in Canada itself in other security situations, that solutions can be devised
that protect confidential security information and at the same time are less
intrusive on the person’s rights. It follows that the IRPA ’s procedure
for the judicial confirmation of certificates and review of detention violates
s. 7 of the Charter and has not been shown to be justified under
s. 1 of the Charter . I would declare the procedure to be
inconsistent with the Charter , and hence of no force or effect.
140
However, in order to give Parliament time to amend the law, I would
suspend this declaration for one year from the date of this judgment. If the
government chooses to go forward with the proceedings to have the
reasonableness of Mr. Charkaoui’s certificate determined during the one-year
suspension period, the existing process under the IRPA will apply.
After one year, the certificates of Mr. Harkat and Mr. Almrei (and of any other
individuals whose certificates have been deemed reasonable) will lose the
“reasonable” status that has been conferred on them, and it will be open to
them to apply to have the certificates quashed. If the government intends to
employ a certificate after the one-year delay, it will need to seek a fresh
determination of reasonableness under the new process devised by Parliament.
Likewise, any detention review occurring after the delay will be subject to the
new process.
141
The second defect is found in s. 84(2) of the IRPA , which denies
a prompt hearing to foreign nationals by imposing a 120-day embargo, after
confirmation of the certificate, on applications for release. Counsel for the
ministers submitted in oral argument that if this Court were to find that s.
84(2) violates the Charter , the appropriate remedy would be to strike s.
84(2) and read foreign nationals into s. 83 . This is a good first step, but it
does not provide a complete solution, since s. 83 deals with detention review
only until the certificate has been determined to be reasonable, whereas
s. 84(2) deals with detention review after it has been determined to be
reasonable. Striking s. 84(2) would therefore leave no provision for
review of detention of foreign nationals once the certificate has been deemed
reasonable.
142
Accordingly, I conclude that the appropriate remedy is to strike
s. 84(2) as well as to read foreign nationals into s. 83 and to strike the
words “until a determination is made under subsection 80(1)”
from s. 83(2).
143
I would allow the appeals with costs to the appellants, and answer the
constitutional questions as follows:
1. Do ss. 33 and 77 to 85 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 , in whole or in part or
through their combined effect, offend the principle of judicial independence
protected by:
(a) s. 96 of the Constitution Act, 1867 ,
or
(b) the Preamble to the Constitution Act,
1867 ?
Answer: No.
2. Do ss. 33 and 77 to 85 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 , in whole or in part or
through their combined effect, offend the constitutional principle of the rule
of law?
Answer: No.
3. Do ss. 33 and 77 to 85 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 , in whole or in part or
through their combined effect, infringe s. 7 of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: Yes.
4. If so, is the infringement a reasonable limit
prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic
society under s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: No.
5. Do ss. 33 and 77 to 85 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 , in whole or in part or
through their combined effect, infringe s. 9 of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: Yes.
6. If so, is the infringement a reasonable limit
prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic
society under s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: No.
7. Do ss. 33 and 77 to 85 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 , in whole or in part or
through their combined effect, infringe s. 10 of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: Yes.
8. If so, is the infringement a reasonable limit
prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic
society under s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: No.
9. Do ss. 33 and 77 to 85 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 , in whole or in part or
through their combined effect, infringe s. 12 of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: No.
10. If so, is the infringement a reasonable limit
prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic
society under s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: It is unnecessary to answer this
question.
11. Do ss. 33 and 77 to 85 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 , in whole or in part or
through their combined effect, infringe s. 15 of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: No.
12. If so, is the infringement a reasonable limit
prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic
society under s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: It is unnecessary to answer this
question.
APPENDIX
Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27
33. [Rules of interpretation] The facts that
constitute inadmissibility under sections 34 to 37 include facts arising from
omissions and, unless otherwise provided, include facts for which there are
reasonable grounds to believe that they have occurred, are occurring or may
occur.
77. (1) [Referral of certificate] The
Minister and the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness shall
sign a certificate stating that a permanent resident or a foreign national is
inadmissible on grounds of security, violating human or international rights,
serious criminality or organized criminality and refer it to the Federal Court,
which shall make a determination under section 80.
(2) [Effect of referral] When the certificate is
referred, a proceeding under this Act respecting the person named in the
certificate, other than an application under subsection 112(1), may not be
commenced and, if commenced, must be adjourned, until the judge makes the
determination.
78. [Judicial consideration] The following
provisions govern the determination:
(a) the judge shall hear the matter;
(b) the judge shall ensure the confidentiality of the
information on which the certificate is based and of any other evidence that
may be provided to the judge if, in the opinion of the judge, its disclosure would
be injurious to national security or to the safety of any person;
(c) the judge shall deal with all matters as informally and
expeditiously as the circumstances and considerations of fairness and natural
justice permit;
(d) the judge shall examine the information and any other
evidence in private within seven days after the referral of the certificate for
determination;
(e) on each request of the Minister or the Minister of Public
Safety and Emergency Preparedness made at any time during the proceedings, the
judge shall hear all or part of the information or evidence in the absence of
the permanent resident or the foreign national named in the certificate and
their counsel if, in the opinion of the judge, its disclosure would be
injurious to national security or to the safety of any person;
(f) the information or evidence described in paragraph (e)
shall be returned to the Minister and the Minister of Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness and shall not be considered by the judge in deciding
whether the certificate is reasonable if either the matter is withdrawn or if
the judge determines that the information or evidence is not relevant or, if it
is relevant, that it should be part of the summary;
(g) the information or evidence described in paragraph (e)
shall not be included in the summary but may be considered by the judge in
deciding whether the certificate is reasonable if the judge determines that the
information or evidence is relevant but that its disclosure would be injurious
to national security or to the safety of any person;
(h) the judge shall provide the permanent resident or the
foreign national with a summary of the information or evidence that enables
them to be reasonably informed of the circumstances giving rise to the
certificate, but that does not include anything that in the opinion of the
judge would be injurious to national security or to the safety of any person if
disclosed;
(i) the judge shall provide the permanent resident or the
foreign national with an opportunity to be heard regarding their
inadmissibility; and
(j) the judge may receive into evidence anything that, in the
opinion of the judge, is appropriate, even if it is inadmissible in a court of
law, and may base the decision on that evidence.
79. (1) [Proceedings suspended] On the
request of the Minister, the permanent resident or the foreign national, a
judge shall suspend a proceeding with respect to a certificate in order for the
Minister to decide an application for protection made under subsection 112(1).
(2) [Proceedings resumed] If a proceeding is
suspended under subsection (1) and the application for protection is decided,
the Minister shall give notice of the decision to the permanent resident or the
foreign national and to the judge, the judge shall resume the proceeding and
the judge shall review the lawfulness of the decision of the Minister, taking
into account the grounds referred to in subsection 18.1(4) of the Federal
Courts Act .
80. (1) [Determination that certificate is
reasonable] The judge shall, on the basis of the information and evidence
available, determine whether the certificate is reasonable and whether the
decision on the application for protection, if any, is lawfully made.
(2) [Determination that certificate is not
reasonable] The judge shall quash a certificate if the judge is of the opinion
that it is not reasonable. If the judge does not quash the certificate but
determines that the decision on the application for protection is not lawfully
made, the judge shall quash the decision and suspend the proceeding to allow
the Minister to make a decision on the application for protection.
(3) [Determination not reviewable] The determination
of the judge is final and may not be appealed or judicially reviewed.
81. [Effect of determination — removal order]
If a certificate is determined to be reasonable under subsection 80(1),
(a) it is conclusive proof that the permanent resident or the
foreign national named in it is inadmissible;
(b) it is a removal order that may not be appealed against and
that is in force without the necessity of holding or continuing an examination
or an admissibility hearing; and
(c) the person named in it may not apply for protection under
subsection 112(1).
Detention
82. (1) [Detention of permanent resident] The
Minister and the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness may issue
a warrant for the arrest and detention of a permanent resident who is named in
a certificate described in subsection 77(1) if they have reasonable grounds to
believe that the permanent resident is a danger to national security or to the
safety of any person or is unlikely to appear at a proceeding or for removal.
(2) [Mandatory detention] A foreign national who is
named in a certificate described in subsection 77(1) shall be detained without
the issue of a warrant.
83. (1) [Review of decision for detention]
Not later than 48 hours after the beginning of detention of a permanent
resident under section 82, a judge shall commence a review of the reasons for
the continued detention. Section 78 applies with respect to the review, with
any modifications that the circumstances require.
(2) [Further reviews] The permanent resident must,
until a determination is made under subsection 80(1), be brought back before a
judge at least once in the six‑month period following each preceding
review and at any other times that the judge may authorize.
(3) [Order for continuation] A judge shall order the
detention to be continued if satisfied that the permanent resident continues to
be a danger to national security or to the safety of any person, or is unlikely
to appear at a proceeding or for removal.
84. (1) [Release] The Minister may, on
application by a permanent resident or a foreign national, order their release
from detention to permit their departure from Canada.
(2) [Judicial release] A judge may, on application
by a foreign national who has not been removed from Canada within 120 days
after the Federal Court determines a certificate to be reasonable, order the
foreign national’s release from detention, under terms and conditions that the
judge considers appropriate, if satisfied that the foreign national will not be
removed from Canada within a reasonable time and that the release will not pose
a danger to national security or to the safety of any person.
85. [Inconsistency] In the case of an
inconsistency between sections 82 to 84 and the provisions of Division 6,
sections 82 to 84 prevail to the extent of the inconsistency.
Pre‑removal Risk Assessment
Protection
112. (1) [Application for protection] A
person in Canada, other than a person referred to in subsection 115(1) , may, in
accordance with the regulations, apply to the Minister for protection if they
are subject to a removal order that is in force or are named in a certificate
described in subsection 77(1).
(2) [Exception] Despite subsection (1), a person may
not apply for protection if
(a) they are the subject of an authority to proceed issued
under section 15 of the Extradition Act ;
(b) they have made a claim to refugee protection that has been
determined under paragraph 101(1)(e) to be ineligible;
(c) in the case of a person who has not left Canada since the
application for protection was rejected, the prescribed period has not expired;
or
(d) in the case of a person who has left Canada since the
removal order came into force, less than six months have passed since they left
Canada after their claim to refugee protection was determined to be ineligible,
abandoned, withdrawn or rejected, or their application for protection was
rejected.
(3) [Restriction] Refugee protection may not result
from an application for protection if the person
(a) is determined to be inadmissible on grounds of security,
violating human or international rights or organized criminality;
(b) is determined to be inadmissible on grounds of serious
criminality with respect to a conviction in Canada punished by a term of
imprisonment of at least two years or with respect to a conviction outside
Canada for an offence that, if committed in Canada, would constitute an offence
under an Act of Parliament punishable by a maximum term of imprisonment of at
least 10 years;
(c) made a claim to refugee protection that was rejected on
the basis of section F of Article 1 of the Refugee Convention; or
(d) is named in a certificate referred to
in subsection 77(1).
Principle
of Non‑refoulement
115. (1) [Protection] A protected person or a
person who is recognized as a Convention refugee by another country to which
the person may be returned shall not be removed from Canada to a country where
they would be at risk of persecution for reasons of race, religion,
nationality, membership in a particular social group or political opinion or at
risk of torture or cruel and unusual treatment or punishment.
(2) [Exceptions] Subsection (1) does not apply in the case of a person
(a) who is inadmissible on grounds of serious criminality and
who constitutes, in the opinion of the Minister, a danger to the public in
Canada; or
(b) who is inadmissible on grounds of security, violating human
or international rights or organized criminality if, in the opinion of the
Minister, the person should not be allowed to remain in Canada on the basis of
the nature and severity of acts committed or of danger to the security of
Canada.
(3) [Removal of refugee] A person, after a
determination under paragraph 101(1)(e) that the person’s claim is
ineligible, is to be sent to the country from which the person came to Canada,
but may be sent to another country if that country is designated under
subsection 102(1) or if the country from which the person came to Canada has
rejected their claim for refugee protection.
Appeals allowed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant
Charkaoui: Doyon Morin, Montréal.
Solicitors for the appellant
Almrei: Jackman & Associates, Toronto.
Solicitors for the appellant
Harkat: Copeland, Duncan, Toronto.
Solicitors for the respondents: Deputy
Attorney General of Canada, Ottawa; Attorney General of Canada, Toronto and
Vancouver.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General
of Ontario: Attorney General of Ontario, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener Amnesty
International: McCarthy Tétrault, Ottawa.
Solicitors for the intervener the British Columbia
Civil Liberties Association: Gregory P. DelBigio and Jason B.
Gratl, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the intervener the Canadian Bar
Association: Waldman & Associates, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the Canadian Civil
Liberties Association: Greenspan, White, Toronto.
Solicitor for the interveners the Canadian Council
for Refugees, the African Canadian Legal Clinic, the International Civil
Liberties Monitoring Group and the National Anti‑Racism Council of
Canada: African Canadian Legal Clinic, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the Canadian Arab
Federation: Roy Elliott Kim O’Connor, Toronto.
Solicitors for the interveners the Canadian Council
on American‑Islamic Relations and the Canadian Muslim Civil Liberties
Association: Bakerlaw, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the Criminal Lawyers’
Association (Ontario): Sack Goldblatt Mitchell, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the Federation of Law
Societies of Canada: Blake, Cassels & Graydon, Toronto.
Solicitors for the interveners the University of
Toronto, Faculty of Law — International Human Rights Clinic, and Human Rights
Watch: Paliare Roland Rosenberg Rothstein, Toronto.