As of my last knowledge update in October 2023, countries like the United States and the United Kingdom have extradition treaties with Canada, but there are instances where they may refuse to extradite individuals based on specific legal grounds or concerns about the fairness of the Canadian judicial system. Additionally, some countries, like Russia and China, may not have extradition agreements with Canada, making it unlikely for them to extradite individuals to Canada. Each case can vary based on legal, political, and diplomatic considerations.
Canada, China, Nepal, India, North Korea, etc.
Yes, the UK can extradite a felon from Canada, but the process is governed by the Extradition Act 2003 and the UK-Canada extradition treaty. Both countries must agree to the extradition, and the requesting country must provide sufficient evidence to support the extradition request. Additionally, Canadian courts will review the request to ensure it complies with Canadian law and that the individual’s rights are protected.
if you have serious charges against you, they could very well could extradite you so you can face them and be tried.
Extradition is on a country-by-country basis. "South America" is not a country. See the related link below for a complete list of all countries that currently extradite to the United States.
Yes. Canada does not support people deserting their military, unless they can prove that their return to their country of origin would result in death or torture.
yes under the provisions of the Hague Treaty.
To extradite a person means to give them up to the jurisdiction of another state/country - usually
The warrant is basically null unless they change their mind about extradition or you get caught in their state, or one they will extradite from. The local Police will basically detain or arrest and release you when they find out the other state wont extradite. The warrant will usually say "Will not extradite from ______" Most states have 10 minutes to find out if a warrant is valid, after that they are required to release you.
yes
The Netherlands.
Check link below
No. The Canadian government will not extradite someone if they are facing execution. The United States must ensure that the criminal will not be executed in order to extradite them. there have, however, been times where this was worked around. For example, the US could get the offender extradited on other charges, then charge them with the executable offense once they were in custody.