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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Arwad al-Boushi (born 1958/59) is a Syrian-born Canadian oil-industry worker.[1] He is notable for being at the center of the controversy over the detention and torture of Canadian citizens that has been attributed to Canadian counter-terrorism officials.[2][3][4]
Al-Boushi wanted to visit Syria to visit his seriously ill father in 2002.[1][5] Al-Boushi had been involved with the banned Muslim Brotherhood when he was a teenager. Prior to his departure Syrian authorities assured him his involvement with the banned The Muslim Brotherhood when he was a teenager, in the 1970s would not be a problem for him in 2002, over two decades later. He was nevertheless captured.
Al-Boushi was tried before a Field Military Court, "whose procedures fall far short of international standards for fair trials."[4]
Canadian authorities ostensibly conducted a long diplomatic campaign to pressure the Syrian authorities for his release.[6] However it is also known that Canadian authorities deliberately leaked al-Boushi's name as a terrorist to CTV News, falsely suggesting he had been flagged after Maher Arar "provided information" to his Syrian interrogators.[7]
As part of a general Amnesty al-Boushi was freed from Syrian custody on [5] According to Dan McTeague, the parliamentary secretary for the Canadian Foreign Affairs Ministry, who played a role in the Canadian government efforts to secure his release:
"He's in very good spirits, clearly delighted with the fact that he has been released,"
Al-Boushi returned to Canada on December 23, 2005.[1]
He says he does not know Maher Arar, Abdullah Amalki, Ahmad El Maati or Muayyed Nureddin, four other foreign-born Canadian Muslims the Syrians had imprisoned.[1]
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