Mr. Abdihakim Salah
Mohamed, an autistic Somali-Canadian youth who was like
meanwhile famous Mrs. Suad Haji Mohamud also stuck in
Kenya and was – in his case for nearly four years –
completely abandoned by the Canadian Government, has
arrived safely back home in Toronto on December 05
aboard a flight via the UK.
Actually his and the nightmare for his mother Mrs. Anab
Issa, a Somali-Canadian who works as a janitor at
Carleton University, began many years earlier, when she
found herself overburdend with the care for her son,
because neither would the Canadian government allow her
husband to join and help her with the young man nor did
she find in the Canadian social services any support -
to the opposite, the Canadian care centers made the
condition of her son only worse.
In early 2005 she therefore followed the advice of the
Canadian psychologist of her son, who recommended that a
change of living circumstances might help, and took him
to Somalia, which was at that time recovering and
peaceful, in order to stay with other youngster and in
the care of his grandmother.
Passport robbed by government
Being his mother, she took his Canadian passport for
safekeeping with her when she flew back to Canada,
because she knew how easily it could get lost or stolen
in Somalia. Upon arrival in Toronto her bags were
thoroughly searched, her sons passport found and
immediately confiscated for reasons unknown until today.
Up to now that passport has neither been returned to Mr.
Abdihakim or his mother, who has the powers of attorney
for her 25 year old son, nor was a new one issued to
him. Despite written insurance already in 2006, stating
that a new passport - even if the old one could not be
retrieved from the Canadian Border Security Agency (CBSA)
- could be issued for Mr. Abdihakimwith with a validity
of one year, no passport has been issued until to date.
When politics and turmoil got worse again in Somalia,
Abdihakim's family and friends managed to Mrs. Anab's
son into Kenya for security reasons, while his mom
continued the struggle to get his travel documents
necessary for his return to Canada.
Lawyers, Community Services, even MPs intervened - all
fruit- and hopeless, because the Canadian High
Commission in Nairobi simply refused to act. And there a
name appears, which already became known in Mrs. Suad H.
Mohamud's case: Mrs. Tracey Vansickle, who seems to hold
a position as frustration and discouragement officer.
Because the Canadian government first contended he was
not who he claimed to be, and then refused to take the
time to look into the matter to verify this supposition,
Mr. Abdihakim's nightmare continued.
Push to end the nightmare
Only when Mrs. Suad H. Mohamud's case made global
headlines and ECOTERRA Intl., who had also helped in her
case, intervened in Nairobi, the Canadian authorities
signalled surrender and Ottawa stated three month ago
that Mr. Abdihakim would be travelling home soon - a
promise which was not kept until now.
"Abdihakim is such a pleasant and gentle young man, that
for us it is not understandable to that he was so
severely mistreated by Canada. It is in our opinion
clear abandonment and a crime to not have issued
immediately to this teenager with special needs proper
identification papers when he came out of Somalia and to
thereby leave him for nearly four years exposed to the
dangers of Kenya, which - though safer than Somalia -
makes also headlines every day for police atrocities,
murder and crime is outrageous," stated a social worker
of the organization. "But this is Africa, where people
also still help each other, especially when the
authorities fail," she added.
The nightmare still continued. Instead of doing
immediately the necessary and issue a passport straight
away, the case went not without further humiliating
interviews, dangerous travels to the Canadian High
Commission, because the High Commissioner again refused
to issue even a protection letter, and months of
waiting. Appallingly, Mr. Abdihakim had to wait until an
air-ticket was purchased and the case rectified also
with Kenya Immigration until the last day of November
2009, when an "Emergency Travel Document For A Single
Journey Only" was issued by the Consular Services of the
Canadian High Commission in Kenya.
Canadian human rights lawyer Darren Thorne stated: "The
stranded Canadians all appear to have been guilty of
nothing other than simply being in the wrong place, at
the wrong time. There is no evidence of malfeasance
against any of them, and in the case of Suad Mohamud and
Abdihakim Mohamed, it is clear that they ended up
blacklisted solely due to the errors, if not outright
incompetence, of Canadian officials abroad.
Unfortunately, this didn’t seem to matter when officials
in Canada were later asked to investigate these
matters."
For Mr. Abdihakim and his mother a nearly four year long
nightmare of being separated and the autistic son
stranded in a foreign land is over - but for things to
improve a change of those in charge at the Canadian High
Commission in Nairobi and maybe even a change in the
Canadian government seems necessary and long overdue. |