Crown wants closed-door hearings in lawsuit of Canadian who was detained in Sudan
OTTAWA — The Crown wants at least six current and former security officials to testify behind closed doors in the lawsuit of a Montreal man who was detained in Sudan — a move the man’s lawyer calls a serious infringement of the open court principle.
In a notice of motion filed in Federal Court, government lawyers propose the public and media be excluded from the courtroom during the officials’ testimony to “prevent inadvertent disclosure” of sensitive secrets.
It is the latest twist in the protracted case of Abousfian Abdelrazik, who is suing the Canadian government for $27 million over his detention abroad.
Abdelrazik, 62, arrived in Canada as a refugee in 1990. He became a Canadian citizen five years later.