Most people should be aware of the situation of Conrad Black. What might be less newsworthy is that the Govt. of Canada forced him to renounce his Canadian citizenship in his pursuit of a happy (to him) life in Britain. He committed the grave crime of seeking a title.
So, he told Mr. Chretein's govt to f off, renounced citizenship, and joined the Peers in Westminster.
Now he wants it back, the Canadian citizenship.
Thing is, I doubt being elected to the Commons in Britain would require renouncing Canadian citizenship. I'm positive of it.
I think Black has a good case, and that the GoC is and has been out of bounds by the standard of the UN Declaration of Human Rights.
No country in the world should be forced to keep immigrants who break the law. The only 'home' anyone has is the land of their birth. If a person has done wrong, then prosecute him or her, but depriving a native born person of citizenship is a no-no.
It is an interesting case.
So, he told Mr. Chretein's govt to f off, renounced citizenship, and joined the Peers in Westminster.
Now he wants it back, the Canadian citizenship.
Conrad Black, who renounced his Canadian citizenship four years ago so he could become a member of the British House of Lords, may have decided that being Canadian might not be such a bad thing.
Friday's Toronto Star newspaper reports that Black has asked the Canadian government to give him back his Canadian citizenship. The former media tycoon gave it up when then prime minister Jean Chretien tried to block Black from being a life peer in British Parliament.
Black, 61, faces eight criminal fraud charges, fines of up to $2 million and possible restitution payments that could run into the tens of millions of dollars.
The charges were laid two years after Black was accused by independent directors of Hollinger -- a Chicago-based publishing company he once ran -- of misappropriating millions of dollars. None of the charges against him have been proven in court.
Black is expected to appear in a Chicago court next Wednesday to fight the charges. If he loses, he faces the prospect of spending as many as 40 years in prison. And his decision to renounce his citizenship could prevent him from requesting a transfer to a Canadian jail.
Only Canadian citizens can request a transfer to a Canadian jail from a jail elsewhere.
Friday's Toronto Star newspaper reports that Black has asked the Canadian government to give him back his Canadian citizenship. The former media tycoon gave it up when then prime minister Jean Chretien tried to block Black from being a life peer in British Parliament.
Black, 61, faces eight criminal fraud charges, fines of up to $2 million and possible restitution payments that could run into the tens of millions of dollars.
The charges were laid two years after Black was accused by independent directors of Hollinger -- a Chicago-based publishing company he once ran -- of misappropriating millions of dollars. None of the charges against him have been proven in court.
Black is expected to appear in a Chicago court next Wednesday to fight the charges. If he loses, he faces the prospect of spending as many as 40 years in prison. And his decision to renounce his citizenship could prevent him from requesting a transfer to a Canadian jail.
Only Canadian citizens can request a transfer to a Canadian jail from a jail elsewhere.
Thing is, I doubt being elected to the Commons in Britain would require renouncing Canadian citizenship. I'm positive of it.
I think Black has a good case, and that the GoC is and has been out of bounds by the standard of the UN Declaration of Human Rights.
Article 13.
(2) Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country.
Article 15.
(1) Everyone has the right to a nationality.
(2) No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his nationality nor denied the right to change his nationality.
(2) Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country.
Article 15.
(1) Everyone has the right to a nationality.
(2) No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his nationality nor denied the right to change his nationality.
No country in the world should be forced to keep immigrants who break the law. The only 'home' anyone has is the land of their birth. If a person has done wrong, then prosecute him or her, but depriving a native born person of citizenship is a no-no.
It is an interesting case.
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