The first comment left on the entry below links to the story of Maoua Diomande, a woman from the Ivory Coast who has sought sanctuary in the church of l'Eglise du Sacre-Coeur, in Ottawa. She came to Canada and set up a small business to support herself. She began immediately to contribute to her new country, and the authorities are seeking her deportation. They are refusing to listen to appeals and unwilling to consider "new" evidence. They've got everything in place for her to be sent back the second she steps outside that church.
In stark contrast to her cace is that of the creep I blogged about yesterday. He was finally escorted out of the country hard on the heels of Jeyaseelam Thuraisingam, another of his ilk who had come here from Sri Lanka in 1989 and within months had himself arrested for a violent crime. How can anyone explain what happened with this piece of shit before they finally deported him. The authorities "struggled" to secure his deportation while he continued to involve himself in violent crime and was arrested repeatedly on such charges. For years, he openly led a gang of thugs here in Toronto, and the gang warfare they conducted cost multiple lives. How was it that they had to struggle to have him deported? He cried wolf, claiming he would face "mistreatment" at the hands of Sri Lankan police if he were returned, and it was enough to buy him years here in Canada. Years in which he robbed our society left, right and centre, while Maoua quietly worked at fitting peacefully into society. Follow the link to Maoua's story, learn what she faces if she is deported and then ask yourself, where is the sense in it?
In stark contrast to her cace is that of the creep I blogged about yesterday. He was finally escorted out of the country hard on the heels of Jeyaseelam Thuraisingam, another of his ilk who had come here from Sri Lanka in 1989 and within months had himself arrested for a violent crime. How can anyone explain what happened with this piece of shit before they finally deported him. The authorities "struggled" to secure his deportation while he continued to involve himself in violent crime and was arrested repeatedly on such charges. For years, he openly led a gang of thugs here in Toronto, and the gang warfare they conducted cost multiple lives. How was it that they had to struggle to have him deported? He cried wolf, claiming he would face "mistreatment" at the hands of Sri Lankan police if he were returned, and it was enough to buy him years here in Canada. Years in which he robbed our society left, right and centre, while Maoua quietly worked at fitting peacefully into society. Follow the link to Maoua's story, learn what she faces if she is deported and then ask yourself, where is the sense in it?

2 Comments:
Makes me wonder where Canada has its priorities ...
Stories like this just infuriate me. Why should this poor woman suffer and a skeaze like that guy stay for years and rob us. I hope she holds out in that Church. What we should be doing is contacting our respective MP's and making some noise!
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