Jailed migrants have right to challenge detention before judges: Supreme Court
OTTAWA — A Pakistani man was deprived of his right to challenge his detention in person before a judge, the Supreme Court said Friday, opening wider appeal options for migrants facing lengthy incarceration.
Although Tusif Ur Rehman Chhina was stripped of his refugee status and was sent back to Pakistan in 2017, the country’s top court agreed to hear his case because it rarely gets to rule on the ancient legal recourse known as habeas corpus — the right to have the validity of one’s detention reviewed for whether it’s lawful.
The principle is enshrined in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which means people held in custody by the state have a right appear before a justice in a provincial superior court to argue over whether their detention is justified.