I don't know professor Hassan Diab, the Canadian citizen packed off to a French prison in 2014 by Canadian authorities on what French investigative judges ultimately decided were unfounded terrorism accusations. A senior Canadian judge presiding over the extradition hearing rather presciently described the case as: "weak," "very convoluted," "confusing," with "conclusions that are suspect" and unlikely to lead to a conviction. He was definitively cleared by an inquiry led by a senior Canadian judge, and paid $10.5 million for his suffering. He was definitively cleared by an inquiry led by a senior Canadian judge, and paid $10.5 million for his suffering. Its position is that if foreign authorities have a case against a French citizen, they should supply the evidence to France, and France will put the person on trial.
Source: CBC News September 15, 2018 08:00 UTC