Calgary Liberal MP George Chahal is trying to rally support among his colleagues to block the deportation of Jaskirat Singh Sidhu, the truck driver responsible for the Humboldt Broncos bus crash, which killed 16 people and left 13 injured.
As first reported by The Hill Times, Chahal emailed his Liberal caucus colleagues last week saying he would be publicly advocating for Sidhu to stay in Canada.
“It was a tragic accident that he was involved in, pleaded guilty and served his time,” Chahal said. “Mr. Sidhu is my constituent and I’ve had the opportunity over the past several days to meet with him, his wife and his child and he has asked for forgiveness.”
A spokesperson for Immigration Minister Marc Miller’s office tells Global News they do not comment on specific cases due to privacy legislation. Chahal says he has not spoken to Miller about this, outside the email he sent to the Liberal caucus.
Sidhu received his deportation order on May 24 during an Immigration and Refugee Board hearing in Calgary.
Despite arguments from his lawyer that based on compassionate and humanitarian factors Sidhu should not be deported, the board said it could not consider those factors and had to rule based on “whether the minister has established the facts that support their allegation that you’re inadmissible for serious criminality.”
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This is because despite Sidhu taking full responsibility for his actions, the law states that he is inadmissible to Canada due to the fact he is not a Canadian citizen and committed a serious crime.
At the time, Sidhu’s lawyer Michael Greene said he was not surprised by the board’s decision due to how the law is written, calling it a “forgone conclusion.”
Greene said that since moving here, Sidhu has become a father, and his child has significant health issues and would not be safe in India as a result.
“My concern, with him being deported is also Mr. Sidhu being separated from his family, and his wife is a Canadian citizen and his son, who has significant health issues and with a heart condition, requires care. And so, I’m hoping that Canadians will also forgive him and let him be united with his family,” Chahal said.
The Calgary MP plans on traveling the country in an attempt to drum up support for Sidhu as his legal team prepares applications to reinstate Sidhu’s permanent residency.
After the deportation board hearing, Greene told reporters he plans to file an application for the government to restore Sidhu’s permanent resident status on humanitarian and compassionate grounds.
Global News has reached out to Greene for comment about Chahal’s efforts to block the deportation.
Sidhu moved to Canada in 2014, four years before the Humboldt Broncos bus crash, moving to Calgary. He was granted parole last year. Sidhu drove a semi-truck through a rural intersection where he had the stop sign near Tisdale, Sask., on April 6, 2018, and collided with the bus carrying the Broncos team. They were on their way to Nipawin, Sask., for a Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League playoff game.
Sixteen people were killed in the crash, including 11 players who ranged in age from 16 to 21-years-old. Other victims include members of the Broncos coaching and training staff, their play-by-play announcer and the bus driver.
Thirteen passengers survived with injuries. One, Ryan Straschnitzki, was left paralyzed from the chest down.
Chahal says he has not spoken to any Broncos families about his push to block Sidhu’s deportation, but will if any are interested.
— With files from Global News’ Caley Gibson.
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