Supreme Court won't hear case of four Canadian men detained in Syria
Federal Court of Appeal previously ruled that Ottawa is under no obligation to repatriate the men
The country's top court will not hear the case of four Canadian men held in Syria who argue Ottawa has a legal duty to help them return home.
The detained Canadians are among the many foreign nationals in ramshackle detention centres run by the Kurdish forces that wrested the war-ravaged region away from the militant group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.
The men asked the Supreme Court of Canada to hear a challenge of a Federal Court of Appeal ruling, handed down in May, that said Ottawa is not obligated under the law to repatriate them.
Following its usual custom, the court gave no reasons Thursday for declining to hear the matter.
Among the men is Jack Letts, who became a devoted Muslim as a teenager, went on holiday to Jordan, then studied in Kuwait before winding up in Syria.
The identities of the other three are not publicly known.
In an application to the top court, lawyers for the men said Ottawa is "picking and choosing" which Canadians to help out of a hellish situation.
They said the men's foreign jailers would release them if Canada made the request and facilitated their repatriation, as it has done for some Canadian women and children.
The four men have been arbitrarily detained for several years without charge or trial, the submission to the high court noted.
"They are imprisoned in severely overcrowded and unsanitary conditions, with at least one Canadian being held with 30 other men in a cell built for six. They lack adequate food and medical attention and one of the applicants reported to Canadian government officials that he had been tortured."
The men won a battle in their protracted fight in January when Federal Court Justice Henry Brown directed Ottawa to request their repatriation from the squalid conditions as soon as reasonably possible, and to supply passports or emergency travel documents.
Brown said the men were also entitled to have a representative of the federal government travel to Syria to facilitate their release once their captors agreed to hand them over.
The Canadian government argued that Brown mistakenly conflated the recognized Charter right of citizens to enter Canada with a "right to return" — effectively creating a new right for citizens to be brought home by the government.
The Federal Court of Appeal agreed, saying the judge's interpretation "requires the government of Canada to take positive, even risky action, including action abroad," to facilitate the men's right to enter Canada.
The appeal judges said that while the government is not constitutionally or otherwise legally obligated to repatriate the men, their ruling "should not be taken to discourage the government of Canada from making efforts on its own to bring about that result."
Sally Lane, Letts's mother, said in August that her son was "barely holding on."
"He and the other Canadian nationals have had to endure what no human being should ever have to endure," she said.
The submission on behalf of the four men said the top court had an opportunity to decide whether Canada has a duty under the Charter to assist Canadians abroad when they clearly face egregious violations of fundamental human rights.
In its own filing with the Supreme Court, the Canadian government said no one disputes that the men face deplorable conditions, but the reason they cannot enter Canada is their imprisonment abroad by foreign captors.
"The Federal Court of Appeal applied settled principles of law and Charter interpretation to unchallenged findings of fact," the government said.
"Especially where there is no participation by Canada in the detention of a Canadian citizen in a foreign country, there can be no obligation under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms for Canada to secure their release and effect their repatriation."