Main Menu
· About PEJ News
· PEJ Radio
· PEJ Video
· Archives to 1996
· World Chat
· Contact-Volunteer
· Email Subscribe
· Fair Use Notice
· Feeds: RSS XML
· Links for PEJ
· Recommend Us
· Search Advanced
· Statistics PEJ.org
· Top Stories - Index
Recommended Sites
Currently Online
There are 233 guests and 1 member on PEJ.org right now.

Welcome Guest. Sign in to submit news or comment.

Login
 Username
 Password
 Remember me


 Log in Problems?
 New User? Sign Up!
Top PEJ Headlines
Left Coast Events - Lower Mainland - Jan 2 08
Ground Zero Logic - Proof that 9/11 Was An Inside Job
Anti-Israel economic boycotts are gaining speed
Hundreds protest Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline in Kitimat, B.C.
What An Attack on Iran Really Means: Gwynne Dyer’s Secret
Iraq: Women raped, sold, killed as US Forces Fail at Security
Parents Beware: Hermit Crabs Make Bad Pets
Muslim-American political cartoonist weighs in on Danish caricatures controversy
Extraordinary Rendition
Israeli Rabbi Outdoes Ahmadinejad
Paying for the Crime: Poison Legacy in Vietnam
Urban Legend: Precaution and Cholera in Peru
Is there a way to wash the pesticides off fruits and vegetables before we eat them?
About the Peace, Earth & Justice News
Sign the petition to support CRTC Chair Konrad von Finckenstein
remembering Nuxalk hereditary chief Qwatsinas
On a Different Wavelength: The Art of Peace & Justice
Bhopal disaster: 1984: If the US can appropriate the calendar date 9-11, India should have 12 - 3
Underreported Struggles
The impacts of uranium mining on indigenous communities.
Shooting the Messenger: Targeting Journalists
Victoria Community Resources, Services and Activists
Left Coast Events - Victoria & Islands - July 5th, 2004
What the Hell is going on? Barbaric bull torture condoned by Canadian Organic Producers
Climate Change Conference in Posnan, Poland: Canada receives 4 fossil awards, and is possibly trying to exempt tar sands.
ISSUES REGARDING NUCLEAR ENERGY BEYOND THE LIABILITY BILL
PEJ News Feeds - RSS, Atom, XML and AvantGo for PDA
Links for Peace, Earth & Justice
Target is Still Iran: Clear Cutting the Middle East and the coming Blood Bath
PEJ Radio News - Free
Basra Bizarre: SAS Commandos Arrested and Sprung
Who's Who - Contact Peace, Earth & Justice News Volunteers
Sun and Secret Sex Dens: Paedophiles Paradise in the Philippines
Left Coast Events - Victoria & Islands - July 5th, 2004
The People Create Thousands of Solutions to Confront Climate Change!
Donate to Peace, Earth & Justice News
On to Lebanon: Israel Sez, "Let's Roll"
Google Earth = Total Accuracy Eh!
Police Tackle Prostitutes in Victoria
Radioactive Waste Gradually Disseminated into Everyday Items
The U.S. and NATO Wage War on the World
Left Coast Events (pt ii) - Lower Mainland - Oct 12 07
Despite movement on the Middle East, disappointment reigns over the outcome of the NPT conference
Is Condi Rice Brain Dead?
U.S. cattle being fed chicken manure?
'Save Us From These Bankers, Fast'
Geothermal: Getting Energy from the Earth
Peninsula Co-op President & 2 Board Members Removed by Arbitrator’s Award
The Human Right to Water and Sanitation”
Response to Ibbitson: For Canada, 2006-2009 were very bad years
Canada Complicit in torture of hundreds of Afghan detainees :: PEJ News :: Stories, Features, Opinion and Analysis :: Peace, Earth & Justice News  
spacer.gif
spacer.gif   Canada Complicit in torture of hundreds of Afghan detainees
Posted by: shamuscook on http://PEJ.org Friday, November 20, 2009 - 08:00 PM
1577 Reads
  spacer.gif
 
Peace News

Canada complicit in torture of hundreds of Afghan detainees

PEJ News-Keith Jones- A Canadian diplomat, who was posted to Afghanistan in 2006-7, told a parliamentary committee Wednesday that hundreds of persons detained by Canadian troops in southern Afghanistan were subsequently tortured by Afghan authorities. Moreover, Canada was complicit in their torture, since the government and Canadian military refused to heed his repeated warnings that torture was “standard operating procedure” for interrogators from Afghanistan’s secret police, the National Directorate of Security (NDS).

www.wsws.org


Richard Colvin said that beginning in May 2006 he sent numerous reports to the Canadian government and military warning that the prisoners whom the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) handed over to the NDS and Afghan National Police were being systematically tortured. But he encountered only indifference and obstruction from the CAF and his superiors at Foreign Affairs.

Colvin emphasized that many of those the CAF handed over had nothing to do with the insurgency against the US-NATO occupation and the corrupt, US-installed government of Hamid Karzai. They had been detained by the CAF “during routine military operations, and on the basis typically not of intelligence but suspicion or unproven denunciation”—i.e. they were ordinary Afghans who had had the misfortune of being caught up in CAF counterinsurgency sweeps.

“Some of these Afghans,” Colvin told the House of Commons committee on the Canadian mission in Afghanistan, “may have been [Taliban] foot soldiers or day fighters. But many were just local people—farmers, truck drivers, tailors, peasants; random human beings in the wrong place at the wrong time; young men in their fields and villages who were completely innocent but were nevertheless rounded up.”

“In other words,” Colvin continued, “we detained, and handed over for severe torture, a lot of innocent people.”

Colvin added that even if some or all of the detainees were Taliban, their torture was a grievous violation of international law and made Canada complicit in “war crimes”: “Complicity in torture is a war crime. It is illegal and prosecutable.”

A supporter of the US-NATO occupation of Afghanistan, Colvin argued that Canadian authorities’ indifference to the well-being and rights of the Afghan detainees had proven counterproductive. “Instead of winning hearts and minds,” said Colvin, “we caused Kandaharis to fear the foreigners. Canada’s detainee practices alienated us from the population and strengthened the insurgency.”

Colvin pointed out that during the 17-month period he was posted to Afghanistan the CAF took many times more prisoners than did the Dutch and British forces deployed to the impoverished Central Asian country and, unlike the Dutch and British, the CAF did not have any mechanism for investigating the fate of the detainees it handed over to Afghan security forces.

“According to our information,” said Colvin, “the likelihood is that all the Afghans we handed over were tortured. For interrogators in Kandahar, it was standard operating procedure.”

Colvin said prisoners were beaten, subjected to electric shocks, denied sleep, and raped or otherwise sexually abused.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper and other senior Conservative ministers have claimed that they knew nothing of Colvin’s reports—although he sent them to senior officials at the CAF, the Foreign Affairs Ministry, and the Prime Minister’s Office—and had no reason, prior to Spring 2007, to believe that Afghan authorities were abusing detainees handed over to them by the CAF.

These claims have never been credible. The UN, the Afghan Human Rights Commission, an Afghan government body, and the US government had all said that they had evidence Afghan security forces routinely abused prisoners, including torturing them. According to the US State Department 2006 country report on human rights, there was continuing evidence of “torture, extrajudicial killings, poor prison conditions, official impunity, prolonged pretrial detention” and other human rights violations at Afghan prisons and detention centers

Colvin’s testimony however provides fresh evidence that the government and military at the highest level were aware that the detainees were being tortured and chose to allow the practice to continue. Only in May 2007, after the issue had become a major political controversy and the Globe and Mail had published interviews with some of the CAF detainees alleging horrific abuse did the government sign a new prisoner transfer agreement with Kabul. Under this agreement, Canadian officials have the right to inquiry into the conditions and treatment of any prisoners the CAF hands over to Afghan security forces.

Colvin described to the committee how the CAF high command and top Canadian government officials in Ottawa, including David Mulroney—then a foreign and defence policy advisor to the Prime Minister and the government’s “point man” on Afghanistan and later Canada’s Associate Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs—first ignored his warnings, then sought to censor and suppress them.

“At first,” Colvin testified, “we were mostly ignored. However by April 2007 we were receiving written messages from the senior Canadian government co-ordinator for Afghanistan [David Mulroney] to the effect that I should be quiet and do what I was told, and also phone messages from a DFAIT [Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade] assistant deputy minister suggesting that, in future, we should not put things on paper, but instead use the telephone.”

When the issue of the possible abuse of Afghans prisoners was first raised in parliament in 2006, the then Conservative defence minister, Gordon O’Connor, vigorously defended Afghan authorities, adding that the Canadian government had, in any event, an agreement with the Red Cross to monitor the fate of prisoners initially detained by the CAF. The Red Cross denied having any such agreement with Ottawa, forcing O’Connor to make a retraction.

Colvin told the parliamentary committee that for three months in 2006 the CAF refused to even speak with the Red Cross: “Canadian forces in Kandahar wouldn’t even take their phone calls.”

Conservative MPs on the committee were quick to attack Colvin’s credibility. Cheryl Gallant accused Colvin of deliberately undermining public support for the 3,000-strong Canadian expeditionary force in Afghanistan. Said Gallant, “The fanning of the flames of outrage over allegations, however unproven, are really having the desired effect on the Canadian people of wanting our troops to return even quicker.” This is in keeping with previous slanderous statements from Harper and other leading Conservatives accusing opposition MPs who have raised questions about the fate of the CAF’s Afghan prisoners of being “pro-Taliban.”

A spokesman for Defence Minister Peter MacKay dismissed Colvin’s testimony. “As far as we’re concerned,” said MacKay’s aide, “no one has ever been shown to have been abused and when there were credible reports we acted with a new (detainee transfer) agreement.” In fact Colvin, one of Canada’s senior Afghan diplomats, sent a report a full year before Ottawa “acted” saying that there was evidence of “serious, imminent and alarming” abuse of prisoners transferred by the CAF. By May 2007 he had authored more than a dozen reports and memorandums warning that CAF detainees were being tortured by Afghan security forces.

The Conservative government has gone to extraordinary lengths to try to prevent any public airing of how the CAF’s policy on Afghan detainees was developed and implemented.

It went to court to prevent the Military Police Complaints Commission (MPCC), an autonomous government agency, from investigating the Afghan detainee issue and since failing to obtain a court ruling entirely shutting down the MPCC inquiry has sought to systematically obstruct its work.

Last July the Justice Ministry sent letters to persons subpoenaed to appear before the MPCC to warn them against participating in pre-hearing interviews. To do so, the letter claimed would put their reputations at risk, could lead to public accusations they are lying, and might result in their having to bear the moral burden of unwittingly exposing members of the military and others to disciplinary penalties.

Later the government filed a motion to prevent 22 witnesses, including Colvin, from appearing before the MPCC on the grounds that their testimony would violate the national security provisions of the December 2001 Anti-Terrorism Act.

According to a lawyer for Amnesty International, which in conjunction with the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association first appealed to the MPCC to investigate the Afghan detainee issue, the government’s attempt to use the Anti-Terrorism Act to prevent CAF personnel and civil servants from testifying at the MPCC inquiry “demonstrates” that it “is willing to go to any lengths to prevent witnesses from testifying.”

As a result of the government’s actions, the MPCC inquiry has yet to hear a single witness. In a further patent attempt to derail the MPCC inquiry, Defence Minster Peter MacKay announced in September that the current MPCC chair, Peter Tinsley, will be forced to immediately step down when his current contract ends on Dec. 11.

It was following these events and after Colvin had insisted that he wanted to make public what he knew of the Afghan detainee issue that the opposition members on the House of Commons committee joined forces and passed a motion inviting him to appear before them. (Persons testifying before parliamentary committees have legal immunity, meaning Colvin was not under threat of being charged with breaking the Anti-Terrorism Act.)

The Conservative government, to be sure, does not want Canadians made aware of the unlawful and murderous character of the regime that the CAF is propping up in Afghanistan.

But the only plausible explanation for the Harper Conservative government’s vehemence in seeking to prevent any scrutiny of how the CAF’s Afghan detainees have been treated is that it knows full well that it and the CAF—at the highest levels—have been complicit in torture, that is in war crimes. And the government is desperate to cover this up for both political and legal reasons.


Stay informed.Subscribe and get the best of PEJ News by email. Free.

Prometheus Institute does not endorse any article or comment that is published on PEJ.org. The opinions expressed in all articles and comments are those of the authors and not of Prometheus Institute or the Peace, Earth & Justice News.


 
spacer.gif
spacer.gif spacer.gif spacer.gif spacer.gif
Search PEJ.org
 
Say No To Tankers

No Tankers campaign

Help protect the coast of BC's
Great Bear Rainforest
from the threat of oil spill

Today's Top Story
Gates Foundation invests in Monsanto

 Please Donate To Peace, Earth & Justice News
Donation link

Past Articles
Sunday, August 29
·Support the humanitarian mission of the Canadian Boat to Gaza 
·Obama to Escalate Slaughter in Yemen 
Friday, August 27
·Climate-related Security Predictions Coming True in Pakistan 
Wednesday, August 25
· Cruise ships using Can«ada as dumping ground Critics say 
Tuesday, August 24
· Just Say No To "Certified Organic" Farmed Salmon 
Sunday, August 22
·Obama's Delusions: The Economy and Iraq 
·Daring to object: Iraq war resisters, though often veterans themselves, have been met with a cool reception, much different from the draft dodgers of the 1960s 
Saturday, August 21
·Uphold the Rights of the MV Sun Sea Migrants 
·Minister tasked with saving US airbase at the cost of the displacement of thousands 
Thursday, August 19
·Myths and Realities about 490 Tamil Refugees on MV Sun Sea 
Wednesday, August 18
· Coalition Calls for the Halt of Radioactive Steam Generator Shipment 
Tuesday, August 17
·The Guns of August Lowering the Flag on the American Century 
·Climate Change Debate Rises with Pakistan Floods 
Monday, August 16
·Radioactive Waste Gradually Disseminated into Everyday Items 
·The proposals of “Peoples Agreement” in the texts for the UN negotiations on climate change 
Friday, August 13
·The Gulf at the Gas StationCan We Calculate the True Cost of Our Dependence on Oil? 
·Clicktivism is ruining leftist activism 
Wednesday, August 11
·Mosque Mania Anti-Muslim Fears and the Far Right 
Monday, August 09
· press conference by Ambassador Pablo Solon of the Plurinational State of Bolivia at the UNFCCC climate negotiations in Bonn, Germany (via UNFCCC website) 
·Bring Water Into Climate Change Negotiations 
·COP16 Mexico: Governments Must not err as thy did at COP15 in Copenhagen 
Friday, August 06
·A Nuclear Gamble on the Not-So-Distant Horizon 
·Hiroshima-Nagasaki remembered: 
Thursday, August 05
·Ecuador Signs Deal Not to Drill in Amazon Nature Reserve 
Wednesday, August 04
·Encourage Rainforest Action Network’s New Leader to Work to End Primary Forest Logging 
Monday, August 02
·Long-Awaited Cluster Bomb Ban Enters Into Force 
·Tomgram: Ann Jones, In Bed With the U.S. Army 
Thursday, July 29
·U.N. Declares Water and Sanitation a Basic Human Right 
·The End of (Military) History? The United States, Israel, and the Failure of the Western Way of War 
Wednesday, July 28
·Dennis Kucinich: WikiLeaks gave us 92,000 reasons to leave Afghanistan PICK ONE! 
·ENBRIDGE: NO PIPELINE, NO TANKERS. 
·The Human Right to Water and Sanitation” 
· Discurso “Derecho humano al agua y saneamiento” 
Tuesday, July 27
·Tuesday Vote Expected on War Escalation Funding 
Sunday, July 25
·Venezuela Will Suspend Oil Shipments to U.S. if Attacked 
·U.S. Labor Fights Back 
·RE: House Republicans and H. Res 1553 
·Fallujah children's 'genetic damage' 
Tuesday, July 20
·18TH ANNUAL FIESTA CUBANA 
·U.N.'s Big Five Facilitate Arms Transfers to Rights Violators 
Sunday, July 18
·Big Oil Makes War on the Earth The Gulf Coast Joins an Oil-Soiled Planet 
Friday, July 16
·Water as Human Right Threatens to Split World Body 
Thursday, July 15
·BP Caps Horizon well, or Did They? 
·Why Are We in Afghanistan?As Petraeus Takes Over, Could Success Be Worse Than Failure? 
Thursday, July 08
·David Johnston by accepting this Appointment as Governor General has compromised himself 
·Hope and Change Fade, but War Endures Seven Reasons Why We Can’t Stop Making War 
Tuesday, July 06
·'Save Us From These Bankers, Fast' 
·Stage-Managing the War on Terror 
Monday, July 05
· Voices from Toronto—proud to be Canadian eh! 
Sunday, July 04
·Fourth of July 2010 Independence Day: the US –a system too entrenched to CHANGE 
 Older Articles
Related links
· More about Peace News
· News by shamuscook


Most read story in Peace News:
Terrorism Soft and Hard, Big and Small

Stories, Features, Opinion and Analysis :: Peace, Earth & Justice News   

PEJ News-- This free service serves up daily news, opinion and analysis of peace, environment and justice issues. Stay informed with web and email stories often days, weeks and months ahead of the mainstream media. Peace, Earth & Justice News is produced entirely by volunteers and is a project of the non-profit Prometheus Institute based in Victoria, Canada.

PEJ.org-- is a project of Prometheus Institute.  Prometheus Institute does not endorse any article or comment that is published on PEJ.org. The opinions expressed in all articles and comments are those of the authors and not of Prometheus Institute or the Peace, Earth & Justice News 

Who's Who Volunteers
Webmaster: freshchange[at]gmail.com

 PEJ News Home -- Peace News | Environment News | Justice News | PEJ Calendar of Events | PEJ Blogs -- World News | US News | Canadian News | British Columbian - BC News | Victoria and Island News | Vancouver and Lower Mainland News

About PEJ.org | My AccountPEJ News Archives | AvantGo Feed - Atom Feed | Banner and Link Ads AvailableChat Around the World | Contact our Volunteers | Copyright Information | Donations Online | Email Subscriptions or New SubscriberFair Dealing and Fair Use Notice | Index of all News | Login Sign InLogout Logoff |  PEJ Links | Public Domain | Recommend Us To A Friend | Register New UserRSS Feed | Search Advanced | Submit News Must First Login or Register | Subscriptions by Email or New SubscriberTraffic Stats | Volunteer with PEJ | XML Feed