Thank you very much, Mr. Sorenson, and good morning, committee members.
It's a pleasure to be in front of you again. It's particularly a pleasure to have an opportunity to share concerns and recommendations regarding an issue that Amnesty International has followed closely for quite a number of years now. Over many years there has been a growing number of high-profile cases that have highlighted many ways in which Canadians imprisoned in foreign countries face serious human rights violations.
The cases have also demonstrated that the responsibility for the violations lies not only with the country where the individual is detained, but may often involve the complicity or negligence of Canadian officials or the direct involvement of officials from third countries. Some of the cases have been quite complex in that regard. They've arisen in a variety of different contexts, including national security investigations, criminal charges, commercial disputes, and allegations of passport fraud.
The human rights at stake are serious, and the violations experienced by a growing number of Canadians have been severe: torture, mistreatment, arbitrary arrest, discrimination, unlawful imprisonment, the possibility of the death penalty, denial of consular rights, access to legal representation, contact with family, and others. The range of countries is also considerable: Syria, Bulgaria, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia, Jordan, China, Iran, the United States, Kenya, Sudan, and others.
Many Canadians who have found themselves in such situations have eventually been released from imprisonment, sometimes after many long years, and have been able to return to Canada. That's often come about only after considerable and sustained public pressure and media attention.
Some of their cases have been examined in depth, including through two high-profile judicial inquiries, various court cases that are under way in Canada and abroad, media coverage that at times has been extensive, documentaries, and now a number of books.
Their names and tragic stories have become all too well known to Canadians: Maher Arar, Abdullah Almalki, Ahmad El Maati, Maziar Bahari, William Sampson, Abousfian Abdelrazik, Arwad Al-Boushi, Kunlun Zhang, Michael Kapustin, Suaad Mohamud, and others.
There are also those who did not come home. I recall the tragic death of Canadian-Iranian photojournalist Zahra Kazemi in Iran in 2003 after she was brutally tortured and raped in Iran's notorious Evin prison.
Other Canadians still languish in foreign prisons where they face ongoing serious human rights violations and where at the moment there appears to be little prospect of release. I very much want to remind the committee today of Huseyin Celil, sentenced to a life term in China; Bashir Makhtal, sentenced to a life term in Ethiopia; Mohamed and Sultan Kohail, facing the possibility of execution in Saudi Arabia; and Omar Khadr, facing ongoing legal limbo and injustice at Guantanamo Bay. All have experienced torture or ill treatment, all have faced profoundly unfair trials, and all have raised concerns about the inadequacies of Canadian government efforts to defend their rights.
What has become abundantly clear over many years now is that Canadian laws, policies, and institutional arrangements do not adequately safeguard the rights of Canadians who find themselves in these circumstances.
I'd like to quickly highlight three key areas where Amnesty International believes change is sorely needed: complicity before detention, meaningful protection during detention, and access to justice after detention.
Let me begin with concerns about complicity before detention. There have been frequent and very disturbing recent revelations about the ways in which the actions of Canadian officials, including the RCMP, CSIS, and Foreign Affairs, have directly contributed to the human rights violations Canadians have experienced in other countries. Those concerns have been confirmed through two judicial inquiries, various court proceedings, and information that is now clearly on the public record.
It is not enough to condemn or regret complicity. Legal and institutional changes should be put in place to guard against such complicity in the future.
One of the most significant proposals in that respect is Justice Dennis O'Connor's recommendation for a comprehensive new model for ensuring proper review and oversight of Canadian agencies involved in national security cases--an area where concerns about complicity are commonplace.
Justice O'Connor laid out the proposed new model in a major report released in December 2006 as part of the Maher Arar inquiry. But close to three years later there have been no steps taken to implement the new model, and the government has not yet indicated its plans in that regard.
Amnesty International's first recommendation is that the model for a comprehensive review of agencies involved in national security activities should be implemented without any further delay.
Justice O'Connor had a wider set of recommendations as well, all directed toward minimizing the likelihood of Canadian complicity in human rights violations of Canadians detained abroad and strengthening the quality of consular assistance provided to detained Canadians. Three years later, however, there has been no public reporting as to the progress and details of implementation of those recommendations. A public progress report is urgently required.
Let me move on to the second phase: concerns about meaningful protection during detention. Whether or not there has been Canadian complicity in the circumstances leading to their imprisonment, Canadians detained abroad often find that Canadian officials are unable or unwilling to offer them meaningful protection once they are detained. Canadian officials will often weigh the pleas for forceful intervention in the case against other foreign policy considerations Canada faces with the country concerned, including trade, investment, and security cooperation.
In some cases, the fact that the Canadian involved has dual nationality constrains Canadian diplomacy. Sometimes Canadian officials exert considerable effort to no avail, because the foreign government is indifferent or even hostile to Canadian overtures. Other times officials turn their backs, even when it is clear that minimal effort would almost certainly make a difference. Far too often officials fail to consider innovative strategies, such as calling on other governments to assist in Canada's efforts or making greater use of multilateral bodies to raise the case.
Responsibility for overseeing the Canadian government's efforts on behalf of Canadians detained abroad lies with the consular services division of the Department of Foreign Affairs. It is not an independent body and is therefore subject to various political considerations that may occasionally limit or shape their efforts. We believe it is time for reform that makes it clear in Canadian law that consular assistance is a right and that will guard against the possibility of consular assistance being withheld or minimized because of other considerations.
We first recommend, therefore, that Canadian law be amended to establish that all citizens of Canada who are imprisoned or face human rights violations in other countries have a right to receive consular services and protection from the Canadian government.
Second, we recommend that an expert ombudsman or other independent office be established to which Canadians detained or facing human rights violations abroad may appeal when they do not receive sufficient support or protection from the Canadian government.
Last, what about after detention? Even once Canadians detained abroad have been released and returned to Canada, the violations of their human rights often continue. This very much includes an inability to seek and obtain a remedy for the violations they have experienced. The right to a remedy for serious human rights violations such as torture is itself an internationally recognized right. For Canadians who have experienced violations in other countries, this means they should be able to seek redress and compensation from those foreign countries and, when there is Canadian complicity, from Canadian officials as well.
In most cases, because of the nature of the justice system in the country concerned, the prospect of turning to foreign courts for compensation is an illusion at best. Understandably, therefore, Canadians need to be able to make use of the Canadian court system to pursue redress from foreign governments. Canadian law, however, generally makes that impossible. Canada's State Immunity Act shields foreign governments from lawsuits in Canadian courts unless the case involves a commercial dispute. This is not defensible. It should not only be open to Canadians to sue foreign governments for breach of contract; they should also be able to pursue compensation when something as serious as torture is on the line.
There are a number of court cases challenging this law, but this shouldn't be left to the courts. There is a role for Parliament to step in and make sure that act is amended.
There have also proven to be great difficulties in ensuring accountability for the role that Canadian officials have played in the human rights violations experienced by some Canadians detained abroad. Maher Arar's case is a welcome exception because he received compensation and an apology. Others are left to labour and struggle through complicated and lengthy court proceedings in an effort to possibly one day obtain some sort of compensation. We need a new approach to that as well.
I'll wrap it up here with that three-part agenda, which I urge the committee to think about very carefully in its deliberations. Action is needed before detention, during detention, and after detention to better protect the rights of Canadians who find themselves in these circumstances.
Thank you.