Pubdate: Wed, 19 Dec 2007 Source: Gulf Islands Driftwood (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Gulf Islands Driftwood Contact: http://www.gulfislands.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/862 Author: Sean Mcintyre PUBLIC SUPPORT CREDITED FOR MAN'S RELEASE A Salt Spring woman who took an active role campaigning for the release of Bert Tatham from a Dubai jail is relieved to know he's arrived home in time for Christmas. Tatham, 36, arrived in Toronto on Tuesday night, two days after authorities released him and 377 other prisoners as part of an amnesty held in conjunction with the Islamic holiday of Eid al-Adha. Two other Canadian citizens were among those released. "It's a good news story," said Salt Spring resident Amanda Spottiswoode, the mother of Bert Tatham's partner Sarah Gilmer, 28, of Victoria. "There are so many bad news stories out there and this is a nice change." Tatham was arrested at the Dubai airport last summer while on his way home from Afghanistan, where he worked with a U.S.-based non-governmental organization teaching farmers about alternatives to poppy production. Dubai authorities sentenced Tatham to four years in prison after customs agents found trace amounts of Hashish and a pair of two-year-old poppies in his possession. Tatham, his family and supporters maintain the hashish became attached to him because of the nature of his work in rural areas around Kandahar. The two "inert poppy husks" were intended as props to educate Canadians about the Afghan poppy supply and associated heroine trade, Spottiswoode said. "You could probably get more poppies from a poppy seed muffin," she added. Within days of sending out a mass e-mail, Spottiswoode was overwhelmed by the response from other Salt Springers offering moral and practical support. "Dozens of the responses were from people I'd even forgotten were on the list," she said. Spottiswoode last saw Tatham two summers ago while sailing with her daughter in the waters surrounding Salt Spring Island. "He has a genuine desire to help people living in the most desperate conditions," she said. In a statement released Monday evening, Canada's Foreign Affairs Minister Maxime Bernier said the amnesty marked a positive step in relations between Canada and the United Arab Emirates. "We welcome this act of goodwill by the government of Dubai. Canada highly values its friendship with the U.A.E.," he said. "Growing commercial ties and an expanding political dialogue give the relationship important depth." Despite the government's best efforts, Spottiswoode said, she and many others believe the federal government could have done a lot more much sooner to secure Tatham's release. "I think that we have a rather naive trust in the Canadian government, but they really didn't do everything they could do," Spottiswoode said. Notes of congratulations on www.freebert.ca, a website designed to raise awareness about Tatham's plight, came rushing in once news of his release was confirmed by the government on Monday. Some echoed Spottiswoode's frustration with Canada's response. "This freedom comes solely because of the intervention of Dubai's head of state and under no circumstances should anyone have any delusions that his freedom was a result of Canada's so-called 'new government' or its members," reads a comment posted on December 17. "If that were the case, Bert would still be imprisoned." Precisely how Tatham reacts upon his return and his plans for the future are uncertain, according to Spottiswoode. "He's angry," she said. "We can't expect it to be plain sailing, but at least he's here." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom