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| A TV cameraman shoots outside Canada's Federal Court in Ottawa May 31, 2006. (Xinhua photo) | OTTAWA, May 31 (Xinhua) -- Canada's Federal Court
opened on Wednesday the appeal hearing over the deportation of Lai Changxing,
the leading suspect in China's most notorious smuggling case involving 10
billion U.S. dollars, but it didn't reach a verdict in the court.
Esta Resnick, a lawyer representing Citizenship and
Immigration Canada, rebutted point-by-point reasons made by Lai's lawyer, David
Matas, why the deportation order, now dated June 2, be stayed.
Resnick argued that Lai had exhausted all of his
appeals. "This is a case of a common criminal fugitive from justice, nothing
more," she said.
Lai's bid for refugee status has already been denied
all the way up the Supreme Court of Canada.
"He's asking you to re-weigh evidence that was
already heard before these various courts and tribunals. The public interest
favors enforcement of the law," Resnick stressed.
Upon the closing of the hearing, Judge
Layden-Stevenson promised to deliver a decision Thursday, or Friday morning.
Lai was accused of being the mastermind of a criminal
ring which had conducted, in collaboration with corrupt officials, the biggest
smuggling operation uncovered in China since 1949. Lai fled to Canada with his
family in 1999.
Lai could be put on a flight to China as early as Friday if he doesn't win a reprieve from the Federal Court. Enditem
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