

|
Saturday May 24
|
| Mia Rahaman on
C$25,000 bail --- forbidden to leave Ontario by Wendella Davidson
Sources
told the Chronicle that a prominent Canadian-based Guyanese
attorney, Mr. Dhaman Kissoon, retained by the
Rahaman family, was successful Thursday in obtaining Mia’s
pre-trial liberty before the Brampton Provincial Court, north of Toronto,
where she had made an initial appearance and was remanded to
prison. Her
mother reportedly posted C$5,000 cash and $20, 000 surety to cover the
bail. She returns to Court on June 13. Mia, who
was crowned Miss
Guyana/Universe 2002 and was Guyana’s delegate at the Miss
Universe 2002 pageant in Panama, was charged with the federal offence of
“importation of a controlled substance,” and pleaded not guilty. The
charge was instituted by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police
(RCMP). The
cocaine, with a street value of CDN $1 million, was allegedly found in a
false bottom and side of one of her suitcases, and in small quantities in
her cosmetics (cream and lotion). Mia
arrived in Canada during the wee hours of May 21 at Terminal 3 of Pearson
International Airport as a first-class passenger aboard an Air Transat
flight from Guyana. An interviewing Immigration officer reportedly became suspicious of
her behaviour and referred her for a secondary inspection with Customs,
the Chronicle learnt. It was
that inspection conducted by Customs that revealed the alleged
find. According to the source, Mia upon being released went to her
mother's home in Scarborough, Ontario, where she was said to be “in some
measure of distress after spending two days in prison, needed to shower
and change and be with her family.” As
conditions of her pre-trial liberty, the court ordered that Mia surrender
her passport to the RCMP, be confined to the province of Ontario and
report to the RCMP at Atwell Drive in Etobicoke, which is close to the
airport, once a month. These
conditions will be in place until the trial is concluded. Sources
on Thursday told the Chronicle that that a federal charge in Canada
carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. However,
as a `first timer’, the Guyanese national who has Canadian immigrant
status since 1990, could if convicted face between two to five years’
imprisonment and deportation on completion of her prison time, it was
pointed out. The news
of Mia’s arrest in Canada in addition to being reported in that country
has also made headlines in the
Caribbean. |