Canada Will Not Repatriate Woman in Saudi Arabia
Thursday, October 29th, 2009
Nathalie Morin (right), with husband Al Bishi and eldest son Samir.
The Canadian government has decided not to repatriate a Quebec woman living in Saudi Arabia who claims her husband is not allowing her to leave the country. Nathalie Morin, who married a Saudi Arabian man over eight years ago, is subject to the Saudi law that women and their children cannot leave the country without the permission of their husbands. Morin has three children and claims to have been trying to come to Canada for almost three years – but her husband refuses to allow her the necessary permission.
Nathalie Morin met her Saudi husband, Samir Said Ramthi Al Bishi, in Montreal at the age of seventeen. They later moved to Saudi Arabia after the birth of their first son. Morin’s mother claims her daughter’s marriage and family life was strong until they left Canada. It is claimed that Al Bishi is regularly physically abusive and that his refusal to let Moran and her children come to Canada is not out of love but out of spite. Although an amendment to the Saudi law allows foreign wives to leave without their husbands’ permission, it does not apply to Morin as she was married before the law was changed. Desperate to have her daughter home, Morin’s mother Johanne Durocher has been pleading that the Canadian government repatriate her daughter. Foreign Affairs minister Lawrence Cannon met with Saudi officials on the weekend to discuss the situation and announced afterward that the matter was to be privately dealt with by the family. Durocher says Cannon’s press secretary, Natalie Sarafian, sent her an e-mail explaining that Morin’s husband would allow Morin to come home – if the government paid him a sum of $300,000. Durocher claims this exorbitant request was passed onto her. “You don’t buy your children” says Durocher.
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