Front Page    
Hour.ca
 
Ottawa XPress
 
Voir.ca
 
Classifieds



 

Making It Montreal: Anglo artists in the spotlight [1]
 

 
Babylon, P.Q.
Jamie O'Meara

My messy mailbag [2]

Explainer
Craig Silverman

Give your Valentine a French kiss

Three Dollar Bill
Richard Burnett

Plateau hero
 

 

January 28th, 2010

Cultural Crossroads: Algonquin hip-hop artist Samian [1]

January 21st, 2010

Community groups collaborate for Forum Against Police Violence and Impunity

Haiti benefit concerts, screenings and exhibitions [1]

January 14th, 2010

New film tackles human trafficking in Canada

January 7th, 2010

Hot Shot: Architect Karine Dieujuste

Hot Shot: Wedding planner Racean Walsh [1]

Hot Shot: Developer and entrepreneur Evan Prodromou

Hot Shot: Paper purveyor Lorraine Pritchard

Hot Shot: Catalina Briceño

Hot Shot: Sensuous ad man Jean-Marc Poirier

Lhasa de Sela loses fight with cancer [2]

December 24th, 2009

Still time to Give Something Big

Vinyl pressing is back thanks to Montreal's
Rip-V
[4]

December 17th, 2009

2009 Montreal in review [4]

Artists fight to save Café Cleopatra [2]

New coalition fights privatization [1]

IPAM offers new hope for urban planning and development policy in Montreal [1]
 
Other weeks...
 

 



News Front
 

Babylon, P.Q.
 

Explainer
 

Three Dollar Bill
 
 

January 17th, 2008
Abdelkader Belaouni still in sanctuary
Write a comment on this article !
Read members’ comments [4]

Two years and counting...
Stefan Christoff
 


Belaouni at St-Gabriel's Church
photo: Tatiana Gomez

Algerian refugee Abdelkader Belaouni has spent the past two years in sanctuary at St-Gabriel's Church in Pointe St-Charles. On Jan. 1, 2005, Belaouni took sanctuary in open defiance of a deportation ordered by Citizenship and Immigration Canada.

"I'm not hiding from Immigration Canada, but I want to tell them clearly, I will not be presenting myself for deportation," stated Belaouni in a public statement at the time.

Ever since, Abdelkader Belaouni, with the support of multiple community organizations and social justice groups, has been fighting a very public battle with Immigration Canada. It isn't the only battle he's faced in this lifetime. In 1996 he escaped a violent civil conflict in Algeria, which took an estimated 100,000 civilian lives. As a blind man, Belaouni made the journey to New York City, and while he never gained status there he did carve out an independent life selling telephone cards.

Following Sept. 11, 2001, Belaouni left New York out of the fear of systemic persecution against Arabs and Muslims, including mass deportations, disappearances and the fire-bombings of mosques. Immigration Canada didn't exercise sympathy or compassion in the case, instead issuing a deportation order for Belaouni three years after his arrival in Montreal.

Today, Belaouni remains in sanctuary, never having stepped foot outside St-Gabriel's Church in all the time he's been there. "After two years I remain here without status. It is tiring, it is depressing, I want freedom," he explains.
"It is clear that the government is aware of my current suffering and my difficult history in Algeria; they must act now and regularize my status."

On Friday, Jan. 18, the Committee to Support Abdelkader Belaouni is holding a demonstration in Montreal to mark his two years in sanctuary, starting at 11 a.m. at Phillips Square, on Ste-Catherine and Place Phillips in downtown Montreal. For more info, visit www.soutienpourkader.net.








 
 



Write your comment on this article!


Denial of Facts  
 
Why do we deny that there is a growing anti-Arab and anti-Muslims sentiment in the West? This did not only start after 911, by the way, but 911 made it easier to express in public.

And why do we deny Abdelkader, a man who undoubtedly faced his fare share of challenges in life, a chance to start a new life in Canada, the same chance most of us (or our ancestors) got?

Ehab Lotayef

January 24th, 2008

So Who Do Rules Apply to Anyhow?  
 
I have a great deal of empathy for Mr. Belaouni both as a man without the benefit of sight and as someone from the conflict in Algeria. However despite the writer biased language ( his lines about disappearances, fire-bombings, deportations and persecution would have you think that it was the Middle East and not the U.S. !!) it is a bit to simplistic in painting Mr. Belaouni as a tragic victim. Seenig he merely 'left' New York shortly after the tragedy, would it not make sence to simply 'return' there if life in Canada is so unfair and seeming unbearable? It seems to me that this is also a case of breaking rules that are there to help govern and unsure the greater publics safety. I can understand the left-leaning sensibility to paint in braod strokes just like the right is doing in the U.s. and here in Canada. But it seems to me that the truth is somewhere in the middle regarding this issue. Otherwise is there an end in sight if he is allowed to thumb his nose at the rest of true perescuted immigrants?

Reuven De Souza

January 21st, 2008

This is Sheer Cruelty  
 
the facts are clear & there is nothing left to be questioned about a blind man that deserves a life, just like we all do.. SUPPORT him for his right is none other than the basic human right to liberty....

Valeed Ak

January 19th, 2008

Blind Man Is Us All  
 
I'm sorry for his handicap, but there is a limit everyone that come to quebec our the rest of Canada are getting to us by making us feel sorry for every problem in the world, that in't right , all strangers know very well that we in QC or Can. are soft at heart and they abuse us that fact to get into this country. I say No this should stop.

Micheline Girard

January 20th, 2008


Write your comment!
please follow these guidelines

Information requested in blue will remain confidential   [privacy policy]
Please indicate your real first and last names.

First name : 
 
Last name : 
 
Your email : 
 
Confirm your email : 


Title of your comment (max. 150 characters)

 
Your comment (max. 2000 characters)

 characters remaining


 
 
 
LIMIT PER PERSON : one comment per article per member. Thank you.

Your comment will be read by our approval team and, if it is approved, will be posted on the website within 24 hours. It could also be published, along with your name, in the printed version of Hour magazine and on any of our partner websites. In order to present the highest quality of comments, Hour reserves the right to refuse certain submissions. Any plagiarism will entail the entire removal of the member’s profile. Hour is not responsible for the opinions expressed by the members.


 



Subscribe
 
Report a mistake
 
Classifieds
 
Jobs at Hour
 
Contact us
 
Advertise with us
© 2006, Communications Voir inc. All rights reserved.