Syrian refugee stranded at airport for 7 months realizes his dream of Canadian citizenship - Action News
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Syrian refugee stranded at airport for 7 months realizes his dream of Canadian citizenship

Hassan Al Kontar made headlines around the world in 2018 when he was stranded in Malaysia's Kuala Lumpur International Airport, then jailed in that country before a sponsor from Whistler, B.C., helped him find asylum in Canada.

Hassan Al Kontar can now finally visit family after living in limbo for years

A man stands in a suit holding a Canadian flag behind him.
Formerly stateless Syrian refugee Hassan Al Kontar garnered a lot of social media attention in 2018 after living in limbo in the Kuala Lumpur International Airport for seven months. Now, after many years, he will have a passport ... a Canadian one. (Paul Courvette)

HassanAl Kontarmay be celebrating alone in his Princeton, B.C., hotel room, but he feels like he has the support of an entire country behind him.

Al Kontaris nostrangertosocial isolation. A refugee from the civil war in Syria, he made headlines around the world in 2018 when he was stranded in Malaysia's Kuala Lumpur International Airport for nearly seven months.

While at the airport, he slept wherever he couldand ate what he could scrounge. He then spent several weeks in jail in Malaysia before a sponsor from Whistler, B.C., helped him find asylum in Canada.

After a long bureaucraticjourney, Al Kontararrived in Canada in November 2018,received his permanent residency and started work with the Canadian Red Cross. It is that work helping with flood recovery that took him to Princeton, where he is receiving hisCanadian citizenship via a virtual ceremony Wednesday.

Watch | Al Kontar reflects on becoming a Canadian citizen:

Syrian refugee stranded at airport for 7 months becomes Canadian citizen

2 years ago
Duration 0:56
Hassan Al Kontar spent seven months living in a Malaysian airport after fleeing Syria. Now, he's become a Canadian citizen, although he says he's felt Canadian for much longer than that.

Speaking to The Early Edition before the ceremony,Al Kontarsaid he had been awake since 4a.m. decorating his room with images of maple leaves, hardly able to contain his excitement.

"Today I'm the Canadian Hassan, and I wish all refugees and refugee camps, all of those who dream of freedom in the face of dictators and war criminals, to go through what I'm going through today," he said.

Al Kontarhadworked since 2006 as a marketing insurance manager in the United Arab Emirates (U.A.E.), but his immigration status was put intolimbo when civil war broke out in Syria, and the U.A.E. refused to renew his visa.

A man sits in a chair by a windowsill containing a cellphone on a tripod  and papers.
Al Kontar actively documented his daily life in the Kuala Lumpur International Airport on his Twitter account, which amassed thousands of followers. (Hassan Al Kontar/Twitter)

If he went home, he knew he'd be conscripted into mandatory military service under the Syrian regime.He remained in the U.A.E. illegally until he was caught in 2017 and sent to Malaysia, one of the few countries that would accept Syrian travellers.

He was accepted into Malaysia ona three-month tourist visa, but when it expired, no other country would take him. That's when the months of living in limbo began.

With help from the B.C. Muslim Association and a lawyer, agroup of Canadian sponsors spearheaded by B.C.'s Laurie Cooper managed to secure hisrelease.

Hassan Al Kontar hugs Laurie Cooper after arriving in Vancouver after flying from Kuala Lumpur to Vancouver in November 2018. (Ben Nelms/Canadian Press)

"These people who have multiple choices in their lifeas Canadians to go and travel, to have funthey decided that the ultimate joy is to help others," said Al Kontar. "Because of them,my life has been changed."

Since being in Canada, Al Kontar hasreleased a book about his ordeal titledMan at the Airport:How Social Media Saved My Life One Syrian's Storyand worked for the Red Cross not only on flood recovery but also on vaccination efforts during the pandemic.

But during all thistime, dreaming of a safe home, he was also dreaming of the loved ones he has been separated from for years in Syria and all that he has missed.

"It costme 15 years of separation from my family. I never saw my niece.I never hugged my mother ... It cost me a father [who]died when I could not visit him or hold his hand when he needed me the most," he said.

Now, with a newly-minted Canadian passport, he will be able tofinally embrace his relatives, who relocated to Egypt from Syria four months ago.

He said the prospect of those reunions and the reality he is no longer "powerless" and "voiceless" thanks to the kindness of Canadians make him deeply emotional.

"The whole world judged me because of the place I was born and not because of my personal faults or crimes.

"Today is a declaration of winning for me."

And whilebecoming Canadian wasbeyond his wildest dreams, Al Kontar said he is now looking forward to realizing another dream ... a cup of coffee with his much-missed mom.

With files from The Early Edition and White Coat, Black Art and As It Happens