He may also, outside the country, continue the judicial review proceeding if he so wishes. See, in this regard, the decision of McKay J. in Kerrutt v. M.E.I. (1992), 53 F.T.R. 96 (F.C.T.D.): I accept the applicant's submission that the deportation order and this application for a stay of that order, is intimately connected to the relief the applicant seeks in its application for leave to seek judicial review. I do not, however, accept that if the applicant is deported, relief which he seeks, if subsequently granted, would be rendered nugatory. The application for leave may be considered in due course. If leave is granted and ultimately the orders sought are granted for certiorari in relation to the decision concerning insufficient humanitarian and compassionate grounds, and for mandamus directing reconsideration of the matter by the respondent, the applicant's interests in Canada, though he be abroad, are not beyond protection. Balance of convenience
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