the judicial review will decide if that opinion, issued in october 2018, is legally fair and reasonable.
harkat, now 56, arrived in canada in october 1995 and has lived in ottawa, or jail, ever since.
he says he will be tortured or killed if returned to algeria, a country he fled in 1990 as a university student opposed to its then military-backed government. after leaving algeria, he spent five years in pakistan.
the minister’s opinion said that, although harkat did not commit terrorist acts directly, he was “complicit” in the crimes of those he assisted in peshawar, pakistan, where he operated a guest house, and in ottawa, where he offered assistance to two islamic extremists who travelled to canada.
the canadian security intelligence service said harkat operated the peshawar guest house for chechen rebel leader ibn khattab and helped move mujahideen fighters in and out of training camps in afghanistan.
khattab is a key figure in the harkat case.
revered by his followers as the “lion of chechnya,” the saudi-born khattab was killed in 2002 with a poisoned letter — likely the handiwork of russian security agents.
both the judge who upheld the security certificate against harkat, and the immigration official who said he should be deported, declared khattab a terrorist who shared ideology, training and money with al-qaida.