Canada: Debate intensifies over deportation of Humboldt bus crash driver
A growing chorus of Canadian journalists, commentators and public figures is urging the federal government to reconsider the deportation of Jaskirat Singh Sidhu, the truck driver at the centre of the 2018 Humboldt Broncos bus crash.
They argued that deportation would extend punishment beyond the sentence imposed by the courts in a tragedy that killed 16 people and injured 13.
On a clear spring evening in 2018, a semi-trailer operated by Jaskirat Singh Sidhu, an Indian-born former Calgary trucker failed to heed a flashing stop sign at the intersection of Highways 35 and 335.
The truck moved into the path of a northbound bus carrying the Humboldt Broncos junior hockey team to a playoff game.
Sidhu’s case has re-emerged as legal challenges continue after he completed an eight-year prison sentence for dangerous driving and was granted full parole.
In an editorial published this week in the National Post, commentators John Manley a former Liberal deputy prime minister of Canada and Jamie Baillie a former leader of the Progressive Conservative party in Nova Scotia wrote that Sidhu “paid his debt to society”
They argued that deporting him after serving his sentence would be punitive beyond what Canadian courts intended.
The column argued that “once justice has been done, once the sentence determined by an independent court has been served, the government must determine whether further punishment serves any legitimate purpose.”
In May 2024, an Immigration and Refugee Board hearing ordered his deportation to India on grounds that he is not a Canadian citizen and was convicted of a serious crime.
The movement to halt the deportation gained traction in Ottawa. In 2024, Calgary Liberal MP George Chahal publicly sought support from colleagues to block Sidhu’s removal on compassionate and humanitarian grounds, noting Sidhu’s family circumstances, including a Canadian wife and an ailing child, as factors in favour of allowing him to remain in Canada.
Chahal told Global News that Sidhu “served his time” after the tragic accident and that further punitive measures risk splitting up a family now deeply rooted in the Canadian community.
He added that the law’s strict provisions on serious criminality render humanitarian considerations difficult to apply, even in compelling cases.
Reactions from victims’ families remain mixed. Some family members have publicly supported deportation, viewing it as part of closure after years of grief.
On April 6, 2018, 16 people were killed and 13 were injured when a northbound coach bus struck a westbound semi-trailer truck that blew through a stop sign near Armley, Saskatchewan, Canada. Photo: Screengrab
Others believe that retaining Sidhu in Canada could offer opportunities for reconciliation or community contribution, though not all spokespeople have been willing to speak publicly.
Under Canadian immigration law, non-citizens convicted of crimes with sentences longer than six months are deemed inadmissible and can face deportation after serving their sentence.
Sidhu’s legal team has applied for a pre-removal risk assessment and a bid to restore his permanent resident status on humanitarian and compassionate grounds, both procedural steps that can delay removal and are currently before the courts.
Lawyers involved in the case have said these proceedings “could take months or years", offering a window for legal advocacy and political intervention.
The federal government has not publicly commented on Sidhu’s case due to privacy rules, but the story continues to draw attention in Canadian media and legal circles.
IBNS
Senior Staff Reporter at Northeast Herald, covering news from Tripura and Northeast India.
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