There are a minimum of 3,000 Canadian residents and everlasting residents in Iran as protests and a brutal regime crackdown roil the country that Canada not has diplomatic relations with.
Canadians in Iran are being urged to “leave now” whether it is protected to achieve this and make a land border crossing to either Turkey or Armenia to access any consular support services.
Without diplomatic relations, Canada and Iran maintain no embassies or diplomatic staff in one another’s countries.
Italy acts as what’s generally known as a “protecting power” for Canada in Iran, with a limited diplomatic capability for handling emergency consular cases.
Switzerland acts in that role for Iran in Canada, and Iran’s shuttered embassy in Ottawa was defaced earlier this week.
Nevertheless it hasn’t at all times been that way — so how did we get here?
How did relations break down?
The freeze in diplomatic relations goes back greater than a decade.
The Conservative government led by former prime minister Stephen Harper placed economic sanctions on Iran in 2010 over fears that Iran was pursuing the event of nuclear weapons.
The federal government on the time said this was done “in close consultation with like-minded partners, including america and the European Union.”
Soon after, the federal government suspended all bilateral trade with Iran and severed all diplomatic ties with the Islamic Republic of Iran in 2012.
The 2012 suspension of diplomatic relations cited Iran’s “increasing military assistance” to Syrian dictator Bashar Al Assad during his brutal crackdown on Arab Spring protests, which included his use of chemical weapons against his own people.
Former foreign affairs minister John Baird, in a press release, called Iran “essentially the most significant threat to global peace and security on the earth” on the time, and Canada designated Iran as a “state supporter of terrorism.”
The Canadian embassy in Tehran was closed on Sept. 7, 2012.
All Iranian diplomats in Canada were expelled and Canadians in Iran were asked to travel to the Canadian embassy in Ankara, Turkey, for assistance.
Soon after Canada closed its embassy, Ottawa designated Italy as its protecting power.
In 2015, a brand new Liberal Canadian government under then-prime minister Justin Trudeau vowed to renew ties after the Iran nuclear deal, also generally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Motion or JCPOA.

Get each day National news
Get the day’s top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.
As a part of the deal, Iran agreed to limit any activities in its nuclear program that may lead to the production of weapons-grade uranium.
In return, most nations agreed to lift a few of the sanctions against Tehran.
In February 2016, Canada lifted some sanctions against Iran “in an effort to contribute to international efforts to acknowledge the progress made under the JCPOA.”
Nevertheless, some restrictions remained on “Iran’s access to sensitive goods from Canada, especially with respect to nuclear proliferation and the event of ballistic missiles.”
The thaw didn’t last long.
In 2018, the primary administration of U.S. President Donald Trump withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal.
“We shall be instituting the best level of economic sanction. Any nation that helps Iran in its quest for nuclear weapons is also strongly sanctioned by america,” Trump said.
In 2019, Canada accused Iran of “incrementally” reducing its compliance with the nuclear deal, “including by expanding enrichment activities and increasing quantities of highly enriched uranium.”
On Jan. 3, 2020, the U.S. killed top Iranian general Qassem Soleimani in an airstrike, and on Jan. 5, Iran announced it was withdrawing from its commitments under the nuclear deal entirely.
Iran launched retaliatory strikes on U.S. assets within the Middle East on Jan. 7, and on Jan. 8, Iran shot down a passenger plane taking off from Tehran.
The downing of Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 killed 176 passengers and crew, including 55 Canadian residents and 30 everlasting residents.

Mahsa Amini protests and beyond
On Sept. 16, 2022, 22-year-old Mahsa Amini died in a Tehran hospital.
The Iranian government said Amini, who was arrested for defying the Iranian regime’s hijab laws, had a heart attack on the police station and fell right into a coma before she reached the hospital. Nevertheless, reporting quickly emerged, citing eyewitnesses who said that she was severely beaten by police and died consequently of her injuries.
Her death sparked the most important wave of mass protest against the Iranian regime in years.
Canada responded by placing sanctions on the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and Iran’s notorious “morality police,” and named a street after Amini in Ottawa.
Trudeau said Iran’s regime was “bloodthirsty” and that Canada would sanction the individuals most liable for Iran’s egregious behaviour.”
In 2024, Canada listed the IRGC as a terrorist organization under the Criminal Code. Last yr, Canada joined america and 12 European allies in condemning what they said is a “growing variety of state threats” by Iran’s intelligence services against people abroad, including dissidents, journalists and Jewish residents of their countries.
The joint statement issued by the U.S. State Department called attempts by Iran to “kill, kidnap, and harass people in Europe and North America” a “clear violation” of those nations’ sovereignty.
Last month, Tehran classified the Royal Canadian Navy as a terrorist organization.

Where do things stand now?
As mass protests against Iran’s regime intensified this month, with estimates of greater than 2,000 people dead up to now, Canada said it “strongly condemns the horrific killing of protesters in Iran.”
“Now we have repeatedly called on the Iranian authorities to stop the persecution of its own population, and end repressive tactics including violence, arbitrary arrests, and intimidation.”
Attributable to the dearth of a Canadian embassy in Tehran, Canada’s ability to supply consular services in Iran is “extremely limited,” the federal government has noted in statements in regards to the ongoing protests.
While many airlines have suspended flights to and from Iran, land crossings to each Turkey and Armenia remain open. Anyone with a Canadian passport doesn’t need a visa to enter those countries, Global Affairs Canada (GAC) said.
Canadians may contact the Emergency Watch and Response Centre in Ottawa, which is open 24 hours a day, seven days every week, GAC said.
— With files from The Canadian Press



