Edmonton man faces deportation to country he's never seen - Action News
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Edmonton

Edmonton man faces deportation to country he's never seen

A young Edmonton man caught selling drugs is facing deportation today to Somalia, a country he's never visited and with a language he cannot speak.

23-year-old drug dealer says he has turned his life around in Canada

An Edmonton man is facing deportation today to Somalia, a country hes never visited and with a language he cannot speak.

Saeed Jama, 23, is to be deported to Somalia, a country he's never been to before. (Canadian Border Service Agency)

"There's killers out there there are people out there who do worse things I do," said Saeed Jama, who spoke with CBC News last week from the Edmonton Remand Centre.

Jama, 23, was born in Saudi Arabia to Somali parents and raised in Canada, living in Toronto, Winnipeg and Edmonton.

As a teen, Jama was caught selling drugs. He wasconvicted of possession with the intentto traffic in Winnipeg inOctober 2010and sentenced to 27 months inprison.

The sentence derailed his efforts to obtain Canadian citizenship.

When he was released,he began tochange his life, he said.

He began volunteering at the Alberta Somali Community Centre, got a job and stoppedselling and usingdrugs,Jama said.

"It is a crime, okay? You know I'm hurting people with drugs. But I'm looking at how I changed and everything. I've changed from who I used to be."

Nevertheless the government told him last yearhe was to be deported toSomalia, thecountry of his parents' origin. He was scheduled to be on a planelast July, but he failed to show up at the airport.

Jamawent underground, running for about five months before Edmonton police stopped him at a routine traffic check last month.

Since then, he has been in custody at the Edmonton Remand Centre, awaiting deportation toa country the Canadian government currently advises against all travel to as "the security situation ... is extremely volatile and the threat of domestic terrorism is high."

Jamas mother, Khadro Mohamed, fears for her son's life.

"I really worry. The country almost more than 20 years didn't have a government. His safety and securityhe's in danger I feel."

Minister of Citizenship and Immigration Jason Kenney would not comment on the case, but a spokespersonsaid in a statement, "If this criminal did not want to face deportation upon his release from prison, he should not have chosen a life of violent crime."