Thank you, Mr. Chair.
General Milner, there might be a mute button on the headset as well, if you received one from the Government of Canada. Even if you unmute in the program, there may be a little remote along the wire that might be the issue.
Mr. Chair, and ladies and gentlemen, thank you for the opportunity to speak to you today. My name is Oliver Thorne. I'm the executive director with the Veterans Transition Network, which is a registered Canadian charity. Until very recently, our entire focus was delivering mental health programs, counselling programs, for veterans of the Canadian Forces and RCMP.
I'll try to keep my statement brief, to the background of our involvement in the Afghan campaign and the key takeaways that we've learned working on this over the previous six months.
First and foremost, as I said, our organization typically runs counselling programs for Canadian veterans. We have a network of veterans and graduates across Canada that we are in close contact with.
In July, we were approached by General Fraser, General Milner and General Thompson who were forming a group of concerned veterans and organizations known as ASET, the Afghan Strategic Evacuation Team. They were working to help prepare and support the government evacuation that was going to take place after the fall of Kabul and asked if the Veterans Transition Network could become involved as the financial arm to raise funds and issue tax receipts to support that effort.
We joined that effort early in August. Initially, our goal was to raise $500,000 Canadian to support a small number of safe houses for the 100 individuals whom General Fraser spoke about earlier.
Over the course of the middle of August, Afghanistan entirely fell to the Taliban much faster than anticipated, so all of our efforts were kicked into very high gear.
Throughout that time, through our fundraising efforts, we funded an individual who you might know as “Canadian Dave”. He is a former special forces operator with the Canadian Forces who took a team to the Hamid Karzai International Airport and assisted the evacuation efforts there and also operated a number of safe houses, providing shelter for people who had come from outlying areas within Afghanistan into Kabul in preparation for the evacuation.
After the government airlift ended, there were very limited options for individuals to get out of the country. Again, with Dave and with the rest of the ASET team, we also continued to fund our own evacuation efforts.
To date, the fundraising campaign has raised $4.5 million. Almost $3.5 million has gone directly to the safe houses and to the evacuation efforts that I mentioned just now.
To date, our best estimate is that we've supported the evacuation of 892 individuals through the funding we've raised and through the organizations that General Fraser talked about in his statement.
The takeaways that I think we have from this effort are, first, that the Canadian Forces veterans are deeply invested in helping their Afghan interpreters. As General Fraser spoke about, these individuals worked alongside Canadian Forces personnel, in the same vehicles, wearing the same uniforms. They were not just interpreters; they were cultural advisers, and in many cases, their local information and knowledge helped save Canadian lives.
In addition to that, Canadians are supportive of Canadian veterans, so by extension, they are very supportive of the Afghans who we are trying to help. This is evident through the incredible response to this fundraising campaign and this evacuation campaign across Canada.
The third point is that the Canadian government was not prepared for the collapse of the Afghan government and the resulting humanitarian crisis. The result was a hasty announcement of an immigration program that IRCC was not sufficiently prepared for or staffed to execute.
The fourth point is that risk aversion on the part of the Canadian government has resulted in policy that has tied the hands of hard-working government employees who are doing their best to execute and assist this evacuation effort, but policy has hog-tied them.
Finally, the result is that Canadian veterans, the public and charities have stepped in to fill this void at their own risk, financially and otherwise, in order to support this effort.
Thank you. I welcome your questions.