Calgary Police are investigating the death of a 49-year-old Nigerian man after an altercation with border services officers at the Calgary International Airport on Tuesday.
According to the Canada Border Services Agency, two CBSA
officers were trying to deport the man from Canada when the altercation
happened on the plane as it awaited takeoff from Calgary.
According to CBC, the man "went into medical distress" and was rushed to hospital, where he died.
Police, who have not publicly identified the man,
said it will be months before full details can be released about the
man's death.
But documents from the Immigration and Refugee Board of
Canada Immigration Division identify the man as a Nigerian citizen who
had been engaged in a lengthy battle to stay in Canada.
The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) is not naming the man until his next of kin has been notified.
An autopsy performed Wednesday
did not confirm a cause or manner of death. Further testing can take up
to six months, said Staff Sgt. Colin Chisholm with Calgary Police
Service's homicide unit.
"We will do a complete, thorough investigation. These
investigations take time, and like any investigation, especially in this
investigation, we're going to wait for official autopsy results to come
back," Chisholm told reporters at a news conference Thursday.
The man was on board a KLM flight destined for Amsterdam
when he had an altercation with two CBSA officers who were trying to
remove him from the country.
The altercation took place prior to takeoff from Calgary.
The plane was forced to return to the gate, where the CPS airport unit
was called to the scene.
Officers found the man in medical distress. He was rushed to hospital, where he was pronounced dead.
According to police, the altercation with the border officers took place around 3 p.m. He was officially declared dead an hour and a half later.
The two CBSA officers were taken to hospital with minor injuries. They have since been released.
A detention hearing transcript from the Immigration and
Refugee Board of Canada Immigration Division on July 26 said he was
detained on the grounds that he likely wouldn't appear voluntarily for
his flight, due to comments he made saying he wouldn't allow himself to
be removed from Canada.
He first arrived in Canada in 2005, making a refugee claim
at Fort Erie. The claim was abandoned, and then reopened, and then
refused by the board in 2008.
He filed two humanitarian and compassionate applications between 2009 and 2013, but both applications were denied.
In 2014, he applied for leave and judicial review of that decision, but that was denied as well.
The immigration board undertook a pre-removal risk
assessment on him in 2015, to study if he would be in danger or at risk
of persecution in Nigeria, and the assessment found he was not at risk.
"[He] is adamant that he will face harm if he is returned
to Nigeria and he has consistently told officers that he will not return
to Nigeria on his own and that he would only go back if he is forced
to," the transcript reads.
An interview between the man and the High Commission of
Nigeria recounted in the transcript noted that "[his] removal would
likely be violent and advised CBSA to take caution."
"This is a life and death issue," he said in the hearing,
according to the transcript. "I told the officer if you are asking …
'You are sending me to my death.' It's like you are asking me to drive
into a ditch … very dangerous for me."
He said he worked full-time in Canada and would continue to show up to CBSA hearings.
"I'm not asking for money, I'm not asking for housing, I'm
not asking for medical help, all I'm asking for is please, your honour,
save my life."
However, the immigration officer speaking at the hearing
said in the past, he had told officers that, "I understand that you have
concerns that I will cause an issue that will disrupt my removal. You
are absolutely correct about this. I will cause a big issue and will not
go."
He had no family in Canada and few friends, an immigration officer said in the hearing.
Police are still interviewing witnesses and are looking to
speak to everybody and anybody who was on the flight or who may have
seen something. They are also working with authorities in the
Netherlands to conduct interviews with the flight's passengers.
Sergeant Chisholm said based on the information they have now, he does not anticipate charges will be laid in the case.
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