Canadian geologist detained in Dubai for six years is back home after charges dropped
MONTREAL — After years in and out of jail in Dubai, one escape attempt, and being embroiled in a multimillion-dollar fraud scheme, André Gauthier is finally home.
Gauthier, a geologist who spent years in legal limbo after
allegedly uncovering fraud in a gold company, said on Tuesday he was at a Dubai
hotel last week when he received a call from authorities telling him he could
leave the country.
The criminal charges against him had been dropped last June
but it took nearly a year to get parallel civil cases dismissed and for
authorities to negotiate his release.
"It was Day 328 that I'd been waiting for that
call," he said in a phone interview from Quebec City, referring to the
time he spent waiting to leave Dubai after the criminal charges were dropped.
"I don't have to tell you, I didn't sleep that
night."
The 67-year-old said he was first arrested in 2015 after he
alerted authorities in the United Arab Emirates to irregular dealings in
gold-trading company Gold AE.
He and his lawyer, however, say he was made a scapegoat in
the $30-million fraud case after the real perpetrators left the country and the
company's investors filed complaints against him.
Gauthier said the hardest thing about his ordeal was feeling
unheard. "You think you’re doing the right thing by whistleblowing
something and bringing it to the authorities, and bringing it to the leadership
of the company,” said Gauthier, who was himself one of the company's directors.
“(You feel) like you’re doing all this for nothing,
basically because nobody wanted to solve it."
A low point came when Gauthier, who was facing about 70
criminal charges, tried to escape to Oman in 2019 and was intercepted and
jailed. It was the only time his faith in his release wavered.
"I just sent a message to my son, my wife and my
daughter to say that they better be forgetting me because with what I had in
front of me, I don't know when or if I would be back," he said.
U.K.-based lawyer Radha Stirling credits the Canadian
government for making a sustained diplomatic effort to free her client, as well
as Gauthier's family for lobbying tirelessly for his release.
"I think the Canadian government's done a good job and
set a very good example to other countries on how this can be done," she
said in a phone interview on Tuesday.
Her only criticism is that she feels it took too long to
secure his freedom. The real perpetrators of the case, Stirling said, have not
been brought to justice.
Stirling, founder of the organization Detained in Dubai,
said she also believes foreign governments need to do more to stand up to the
U.A.E. government.
"These money-laundering scams in the U.A.E. are going
on all the time and we're getting more and more, and they're targeting Canadian
investors and American investors, and we're turning a blind eye to this kind of
abuse," she said.
Gauthier said his father died in Quebec while he was
detained, and he exhausted his financial resources fighting the cases.
Now home quarantining with his wife, he says he'll spend the
next few weeks and months getting his driver's licence and health insurance
back, and wants to visit his extended family in Quebec's Saguenay region.
Eventually, he's interested in getting back into the mining industry.
He wants to pass on a message to the families of Michael
Kovrig and Michael Spavor, the two Canadians who have been detained in China in
an apparent retaliation for Canada's arrest of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou,
to tell them not to give up.
"I can tell those families it’s important to keep the
faith that the government will try to find a solution," he said.
"How long will it take, unfortunately it’s a file
that’s much more complicated than mine, but they have to keep the hope that
everything will work out in a reasonable time frame."
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