Abdurahman Ibrahim Hassan, who had serious mental health issues and died in 2015, was deemed inadmissible by border agents in 2005.
There was no timeline to get Abdurahman Ibrahim Hassan out of jail and out of this country.
Hassan had arrived in this country in 1992 and was granted asylum a year later. But he had been flagged for removal as far back as 2005 due to what was called his serious criminality. He exhausted all avenues of appeal, over the years, culminating with the fight to reverse a “danger opinion” against him.
Instead, Hassan remained at the Lindsay jail, often in segregation due to his serious mental health illnesses, with “no end date” to his release or deportation. In 2009, border officials requested then-immigration minister Jason Kenney issue an opinion to declare Hassan a danger to the public. In 2013, the minister’s delegate concluded that Hassan’s threat to Canadians outweighed the risks he might face if returned to war-torn Somalia.
Border officials would have limited interactions with an immigration detainee in a provincial jail other than at detention reviews or during attempts to get the person to sign documents to facilitate removals, Desmarais said.
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