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Mother, uncle of slain woman lose battle to avoid extradition

VANCOUVER — The mother and uncle of a young B.C. woman slain in Punjab in 2000 have lost their last-ditch attempt to avoid extradition to India. The B.C.
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Malkit Kaur Sidhu and Surjit Singh Badesha.

VANCOUVER — The mother and uncle of a young B.C. woman slain in Punjab in 2000 have lost their last-ditch attempt to avoid extradition to India.

The B.C. Court of Appeal has dismissed an application from Malkit Kaur Sidhu and Surjit Singh Badesha to have an extradition order against them stayed because they claimed there was an abuse of process.

The two are alleged to have been involved in the so-called honour killing of Sidhu’s daughter Jaswinder (Jassi) Kaur, who ignored her family’s wishes and married a poor rickshaw driver while on vacation in India in 1999.

After the Supreme Court of Canada ruled unanimously against the accused brother and sister in September 2017, the RCMP escorted Sidhu and Badesha from their B.C. jails to Toronto, where they were placed aboard a flight to India.

The extraction was halted before the plane disembarked because lawyers for Sidhu and Badesha filed a last-minute court application asking for a review of Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould’s decision to surrender them to Indian authorities.

Appeal Court Chief Justice Robert Bauman and Justice Sunny Stromberg-Stein dismissed that request for a judicial review Tuesday. They said the minister’s decision not to review “new” evidence provided by the defendants about conditions in Indian prisons was reasonable.

“The minister was right to express concern for an effective, expeditious extradition process and respect for the principle of finality,” the appeal court justices said. Appeal Court Justice Bruce Butler agreed with his colleagues.

The ruling said the Maple Ridge residents have had seven years to present their legal arguments in Canadian courts. “The applicants are charged with the most serious crimes and have had the opportunity to challenge their extradition over a seven-year period: their submissions implicating India’s prison system have been considered by two ministers of justice, this court and the Supreme Court of Canada,” Bauman and Stromberg-Stein wrote.

The judges agreed that there was an abuse of process when Badesha and Sidhu were covertly taken from their jails in September 2017 and taken to Toronto for extradition without being able to talk with their lawyers. “They were literally at the door of the Delhi-bound plane, literally about to be handed into the custody of the Indian police officers,” Bauman and Stromberg-Stein said.

Jassi and her husband, Sukhwinder Singh Sidhu, were travelling by scooter in Punjab when they were attacked by a group of armed men. Sukhwinder was seriously injured. Jassi was later found dead. Her throat had been cut.