In Canada’s immigration law, anyone can be a terrorist
It’s called section 34 (1) (f) of Canada’s main immigration law, and it likely would have kept Nelson
Oscar Vigil and his wife Carolina Teves. As a university student in El Salvador in the 1980s, Vigil acted as a contact between foreign journalists and rebel leaders during his country's civil war. After 13 years in Canada, Vigil is about to be deported as a "terrorist."