Iran’s former deputy interior minister tries to stop deportation from Canada

A former high-ranking Iranian regime official caught living in Canada has asked a federal judge to halt his deportation, documents obtained by Global News show.

Seyed Salman Samani, who was until recently Iran’s deputy interior minister, claimed in an appeal to the Federal Court that expelling him would violate his rights.

In a court application filed in Toronto, Samani said that on June 19 Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada had denied his request to defer his removal back to Iran.

Calling the choice “unlawfully made” and “patently unreasonable,” the 45-year-old former Iranian government spokesperson asked the court to overturn the ruling.

At the identical time, he filed an “anonymity order notice” by which he urged the court to wash his name from all documents related to his appeal.

As a result of the “high-profile nature” of his case, Samani said he desired to be identified only by “randomized and arbitrary initials” corresponding to A.B. or X.Y.

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The court has not yet ruled on the matter.

Samani is considered one of almost three dozen alleged senior members of Iran’s repressive regime who’ve been present in Canada, in response to figures released by federal immigration officials.

The Immigration and Refugee Board ordered his deportation greater than two years ago but his court appeal, filed on Canada Day, shows he has still not been sent home.

The CBSA declined to comment on the case.


Click to play video: 'Children of some Iranian regime leaders live in West'


Children of some Iranian regime leaders live in West


Iranian-Canadians have long complained that the country risks becoming a refuge for members of Iran’s regime, and have called for higher screening to weed them out.

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The Canadian government banned all “senior” Iranian government officials from entering Canada in 2022, but immigration officials have struggled to deport them.

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Of the 34 suspected regime members that the Canada Border Services Agency has identified for possible deportation, just one has been sent back to Iran to this point.

Samani is a “profession politician” who held a “plethora” of presidency positions in Iran between 2007 and 2021, in response to the CBSA’s report on him.

“The topic demonstrated his commitment and loyalty to the regime throughout his profession,” the CBSA wrote in its report, obtained by Global News.

After leaving the Iranian government in August 2021, Samani flew to Canada using a visitor visa issued in Ankara, Turkey.

In 2024, he became considered one of the primary Iranian regime members brought before the Refugee Board for a deportation hearing under the ban on senior officials.

At his hearing, Samani downplayed his importance in the federal government and denied any involvement in human rights abuses.

However the CBSA said he held “significant influence on the exercise of presidency power” and was “only two positions faraway from the President of Iran.”

Because the Ministry of Interior’s official spokesperson, he “served as a conduit for state propaganda, accountable for disseminating information that aligned with the federal government narrative and suppressing any dissenting views.”

Samani’s department sent agents to attack political protests and was accountable for “frequent violations of speech and assembly rights in Iran,” the CBSA argued.


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The IRB ordered the deportation of Seyed Salman Samani in 2024.

Immigration and Refugee Board

In his recent court filings, Samani argued that Canadians shouldn’t be permitted to learn about his case.

He wrote that he had a “considerable profile as a former member of the Iranian government, which has gathered substantial media attention.”

If his case were heard in public, he might face “possible retribution from Iranian authorities,” he claimed.

Although Canada’s courts are open to the general public, the Federal Court allows applicants to ask to have their cases anonymized, meaning they will not be identified by name, but that is completed rarely.

Samani also tried to ban the press from his deportation hearing in 2024. Global News fought the move and the Refugee Board ruled it will be held in public.

One other alleged regime member, Abbas Omidi, tried to ban news reporters from his deportation hearing as well, however the IRB ruled in March that such cases were in the general public interest.

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“For all Canadians, I find that transparency regarding the sort of allegation Mr. Omidi is facing is a very important safeguard that permits accountability, deters impunity, and reinforces public confidence in Canadian legal processes and institutions,” the Board wrote.

“On this context, hiding Mr. Omidi’s identity would have a robust deleterious/negative effect on the general public’s interest within the open court process.”

Canada has had tense relations with Iran because the country’s 1979 Islamic revolution. Ottawa severed diplomatic ties with Tehran in 2012, citing the regime’s nuclear program and support for terrorist groups.

More recently, the federal government’s threat assessment agency said in a declassified report that the regime’s intelligence service could also be linked to attacks in Canada because the start of the Iran war.

Stewart.Bell@globalnews.ca

&copy 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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