Ariza Dept: Video: Migrant workers among 11 dead in Ontario crash, according to Globe and Mail. But he is worried the federal government will not allow him to return to Canada if he leaves London, Ont., where he is still receiving treatment for the physical and mental trauma he suffered in one of Ontario's deadliest road crashes. Mr. Ariza's work permit and visa expire on Jan. 31. Mr. Ariza, who has a seven-year-old son, wants to remain in Canada on humanitarian and compassionate grounds and video: Officials horrified by Ontario crash Ontario Provincial Police and emergency crews investigate a motor vehicle accident that killed 11 people near Hampstead, Ont., on Feb. 6, 2012. Dave Chidley/The Canadian Press Tragedy Now, Ms. Fulton is trying to help Mr. Ariza gain the precious thing she lost: time with a spouse. Mr. Ariza wants to travel to Peru to visit his ailing wife, who was rushed to a hospital about three weeks ago when a fluid-filled cyst began pressing against her spinal cord, causing her to lose feeling in her arms.
(www.immigrantscanada.com). As
reported in the news.
@t Ontario Provincial Police, Ariza
21.12.12