Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Amnesty Calls for Inquiry into Canada's Policies on Afghan Detainees

Fascinating news on the human rights front: Amnesty International is claiming that Canada has been, as far back as 2002, transferring detainees over to Afghan authorities, a situation that critics say puts prisoners at risk of being tortured.


Public opinion seems to be summed up by E. Bopp in his letter to the Vancouver Province today.

Mr. Bopp in yesterday’s Province writes in regard to the “alleged cruel and inhuman treatment” of captured Taliban fighters when turned over to Afghan authorities in Kandahar: “Can extending the reach of Canada's all-purpose Charter of Rights and Freedoms to Taliban detainees be far behind?” To this, I can only answer with great fervor and conviction: “I hope not”.

The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms is the greatest piece of legislation in Canadian history. It is a shield that protects the least of us from the weight of the state being brought to bear against us – keeps our homes, our conversations and our person safe from random intrusion from the government. It gives Canada, as an operating democracy, the moral weight to stand up on the world stage against tyranny, fear and fascism. Handing over detained prisoners to a government where there is no assurance that they will be treated with humanity so that we don’t have to deal with them in a just and fair manner is just wrong.

Mr. Bopp puts the words “cruel and inhuman” in quotation marks, and uses the word allegedly perhaps because he does not believe that Afghanistan’s government is torturing detainees. Amnesty International says they are. That’s good enough for me. Canada should be the first nation to step forward and say that it’s wrong – not a nation facilitating these abuses.

For the record, I am a (metaphorically) card-carrying member of the BC Civil Liberties Association and of Amnesty (oh, and of Lawyer's Rights Watch Canada, and of all sorts of other "lefty-liberal" organizations). They perform an essential function in our society - to stand up for those that society generally feels are the least of us. Without this, rights could be eroded to the point that the state becomes more powerful than the individuals or voices of opposition can be.

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