Refugee seeker turned reluctant captain of Tamil migrant ship not guilty: lawyer
VANCOUVER — The captain of a vessel that arrived on British Columbia’s shores carrying hundreds of Tamil migrants did not break the law because he was acting on humanitarian grounds by helping his fellow asylum seekers, a court has heard.
In closing arguments at a B.C. Supreme Court jury trial on Thursday, Sandy Ross said his client had no intention of piloting the MV Sun Sea when he paid for the trip as a passenger, but “was thrown into the role of captain” after the Thai crew abandoned the vessel.
Ross’s client, Lesly Emmanuel, and three other Sri Lankan men are accused under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act of bringing hundreds of Tamil migrants from Thailand to Canada, where they intended to claim refugee status.
The act doesn’t apply to his client if his actions were humanitarian in nature, Ross said.


