Jamila Bibi’s case is closed and any hope the Pakistani woman had of returning to Saskatoon is all but gone, her lawyer says.

“I had some hope,” Bibi’s lawyer Bashir Khan told CTV. “That’s all dashed. There’s nothing else left.”

Bibi was deported to Pakistan from Saskatoon three months ago following a 2009 decision by the Canadian Immigration and Refugee Board to deny her refugee status. Her case remained open until Monday when the federal government dismissed it — essentially eliminating her chance of returning to Canada, Khan said.

“She’s actually under the legal status of a deportation order, which bans you to re-enter Canada for your natural life. That’s pretty serious,” he said.

She can’t re-enter Canada unless Citizenship and Immigration Minister Chris Alexanderissues an authorization return to Canada — something Khan doesn’t believe will happen.

Bibi fled to Canada from Pakistan in 2007shortly after she was attacked and woke up in prison facing charges of adultery and prostitution, according to a document Bibi filed to Canada’s Immigration and Refugee Board.

She was tortured and her clothes were torn off in the attack, the document reads.

The elderly mother of six feared her life was in danger, that she could be the victim of an honour killing if she didn’t leave Pakistan — and if she returned to Pakistan.

The accusations of adultery, which were proven false, stemmed from a decades-long family dispute over land ownership.

The Canadian Immigration and Refugee Board rejected Bibi’s refugee status in 2009, ruling her life was not at risk if she returned to her home country.

She was first ordered to deport Canada in 2011, but Khan took her case to the United Nations' Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, which requested the Canadian government stop Bibi's deportation until it could review her case.

She was deported in September after the UN request was lifted.

Bibi immediately went into hiding upon her return to Pakistan, according to a close friend. She was crying and could hardly speak when the two talked over the phone.

CTV recently reached out to the friend but has not yet received a response. Khan said he has not spoken to Bibi since her deportation.

“I’ve never heard from Jamila and I don’t think I ever will,” he said.