Freeland says she brought up case of imprisoned Canadian, with Cuban foreign minister
MONTREAL — Canada’s Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said Friday she raised the case of Benjamin Tomlin, a Canadian citizen imprisoned in Cuba, during a meeting with her Cuban counterpart earlier this week.
The minister rejected claims from Tomlin’s family and from a prominent Montreal constitutional lawyer that Canada doesn’t do enough to protect its citizens abroad.
The Canadian Press reported Wednesday that Tomlin, 46, was sentenced in March to 10 years in prison in Cuba for allegedly having sexual relations with a 15-year-old girl.
His Canadian lawyer, Ricardo Alcolado Perez, said his client was likely set up after a night of partying in a seaside town outside the resort destination of Varadero. Alcolado Perez said Tomlin’s legal proceedings were plagued with irregularities and none of the witnesses in the case — including the minor with whom he is accused of having sexual relations — identified him in court.