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EX-KGB agent marks fourth year in sanctuary

Mikhail Lennikov ordered deported in 2009
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Vancouver's First Lutheran Church held a fourth anniversary dinner for Burnaby resident and former KGB agent Mikhail Lennikov June 1.

June 2 marked four years that Lennikov has been living in church sanctuary at the East Side church on Wales Street. Lennikov was ordered deported on June 3, 2009 because of his history with the KGB, the former Soviet secret service, although he's argued he poses no threat to Canadian security. Lennikov's wife and son have been allowed to stay in the country on humanitarian and compassionate grounds and have also been living in the church.

Burnaby-New Westminster MP Peter Julian has been an outspoken supporter of Lennikov, but Julian couldn't attend the dinner this year.

"It's a sad moment, when you think what the family's going through," he said.

In 2009, Julian obtained thousands of pages of government files on Lennikov. "There's nothing in his files which indicates there's any reason for the (immigration) minister to deny on compassionate and humanitarian grounds for the Lennikov family to stay in Canada," Julian said. "The family's been through a lot. Mr. Lennikov has spent years in what is, in effect, a prison. He's not allowed to leave the church grounds, he has not left the church grounds, he hasn't really been out in the sunlight in years. I think it's just another example of what's been a really wrong-headed immigration policy by this government."

Julian said his constituents feel the same.

"There is overwhelming support for the Lennikovs in our community, in Burnaby and New Westminster, and I regularly get emails from folks who want the government to simply allow them to stay together - to allow them to stay and allow Mr. Lennikov to leave the church and walk out a free man," he said.

The practice of sanctuary as a last resort for asylum seekers has existed for centuries, but the right to religious refuge is not enshrined in Canadian law.

According to the Canadian Border Services Agency, Lennikov is still subject to a removal order. "He is in violation of Canada's immigration law and is in Canada illegally," wrote CBSA communication advisor Faith St. John in an email. "There are no places in Canada where individuals can retreat and be immune from Canadian law."

St. John said sanctuary cases undermine the integrity of Canada's immigration program and CBSA officers can still enter, or seek a warrant to enter, any building in which a person who is evading removal may be staying. "However, the CBSA strives to ensure that the appropriate balance is struck between our obligation to enforce immigration laws in a fair, balanced and consistent manner, while mitigating risks to individuals, officers, and the general public," she added. "Whenever possible if the individual is not an immediate risk to the community, the CBSA prefers to negotiate with those individuals who have retreated to a place of worship to avoid removal from Canada and to have them voluntarily exit the place of worship for arrest by CBSA or other law enforcement agencies."

Neither the pastor nor Lennikov responded to requests for an interview.

jmoreau@burnabynow.com

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