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Aussie government to deport Canadian on hunger strike

Ziad Chebib is shown in this undated family handout photo in Sydney, Australia. The Australian government said doctors were watching a Canadian citizen who is on a hunger strike to protest his imminent deportation from the country over visa problems. Chebib said immigration officials told him Monday that he would be put on a plane for Vancouver on Wednesday. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO) Ziad Chebib is shown in this undated family handout photo in Sydney, Australia. The Australian government said doctors were watching a Canadian citizen who is on a hunger strike to protest his imminent deportation from the country over visa problems. Chebib said immigration officials told him Monday that he would be put on a plane for Vancouver on Wednesday. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO)
Ziad Chebib is shown in this undated family handout photo in Sydney, Australia. The Australian government said doctors were watching a Canadian citizen who is on a hunger strike to protest his imminent deportation from the country over visa problems. Chebib said immigration officials told him Monday that he would be put on a plane for Vancouver on Wednesday. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO)

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Date: Monday Dec. 7, 2009 6:57 AM ET

MELBOURNE, Australia — The Australian government said doctors were watching a Canadian citizen who is on a hunger strike to protest his imminent deportation from the country over visa problems.

Ziad Chebib said immigration officials told him Monday that he would be put on a plane for Vancouver on Wednesday.

"The Australian government has tried to wash their hands from any responsibility toward me at all and that is very, very sad," Chebib told The Canadian Press by phone from the detention centre in Melbourne where he is currently awaiting deportation.

Chebib had not eaten any food since last Thursday, confining himself to drinking water and the occasional cup of coffee, saying he is in no condition to travel.

"(I feel) worn down by a ton of bricks," he said.

An Australian immigration department spokesman, who didn't want to be identified, said Monday that both detention centre and health professionals were keeping an eye on his condition, but no immediate intervention was planned.

"We would wait for a medical professional's advice as to what action we might take if he chooses to continue not eating," the spokesman said. "It would obviously be a significant period of time beyond now if he's drinking water before something along those lines would need to be considered."

The spokesman earlier refused to say when Chebib would be deported.

A spokesman for the Canadian Foreign Affairs department would only say Ottawa was aware of the matter.

"The Canadian consulate general in Sydney is in contact with local authorities and is ready to provide consular assistance as required," Rodney Moore, a foreign affairs spokesman said Sunday.

But Chebib said his attempts to call the consulate were unsuccessful, saying all he could get were voice messages.

"It's all machines to talk to, when you need someone from the Canadian embassy to talk to you immediately, they're not there for you," a frustrated Chebib said.

Chebib said he tried to appeal to Canadian diplomats earlier this year, but was rebuffed. He said diplomats told him they had no say in an Australian immigration matter.

Chebib, 55, was born in Lebanon and emigrated to Canada in 1976, becoming a citizen and starting up a limousine business in Calgary.

In 2000, he and his family moved to Australia because two of his siblings already lived there.

Chebib was allowed in the country on a business visa but he was unable to make the income he needed to justify the visa. Both his wife and one of his sons developed health problems and his finances became overstretched, he said.

Then he started having problems with the Australian government, becoming tangled up in years of manoeuvring through the bureaucracy.

Two of Chebib's married daughters can remain in the country, but battles with the government over the visa issues pressured his ill wife and son to move to Lebanon, Chebib said. He has another son who lives in Canada and some 85 extended family members who live in Australia.

But the immigration department spokesman said Chebib no longer fits the criteria of his original visa and was granted a number of appeals.

It was unclear if the Australian government has officially notified the Canadian government that it intends to send Chebib back, there is no requirement to do so said the immigration department spokesman.

"He is a Canadian citizen, he has access to his government and we have the right to remove him from our country," the spokesman said.

"He has no further right at all to stay here."

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