Thank you, Chair.
I'm very concerned about Mohammad Mahjoub, Mahmoud Jaballah, and Hassan Almrei, the detainees at the Kingston immigration holding centre. I think their hunger strike has reached a very crucial point.
This was driven home to me by an article in the British Medical Journal by Dr. Michael Peel that appeared in October 1997, where he was looking at the effects of hunger strikes on individuals engaged in them. He stated in that article that daily monitoring should take place after day 10. It has also been noted that serious health consequences are possible after day 49, including heart and renal failures, severe hypertension and hypotension, and heart arrhythmia.
The minister has stated a number of times that the nurse visits the Kingston immigration holding centre every day at 10 a.m., and I think we all know that's the case. But we also know that the nurse doesn't attend the men in the living unit, and we know from our own experience and from our visit and from follow-up since then that they won't go to the administration unit for a visit with the nurse. So in fact they aren't being monitored daily with a direct contact with a medical professional.
They've also asked for a doctor. I spoke to Mr. Mahjoub and the other men yesterday, but particularly Mr. Mahjoub, who said yesterday that he'd requested to be seen by Dr. Adam Newman of Kingston—I believe I have the name correct. Dr. Newman is someone who often attends at the federal penitentiaries in the Kingston area, but this request was denied, as was a similar request he made to see Dr. Newman on January 22.
I'm also struck by information that hunger strikers in the early 1980s—I think we are all aware of the hunger strikes that happened as a result of the conflict in Northern Ireland—at the Maze prison in Belfast died after hunger strikes of 45 to 61 days. So I think if you look at those parameters you understand what we're up against in the situation of the men in Kingston. I think we're in a very serious stage.
I've struggled with how we move past this situation and how we resolve it. The minister said he can't comment on the specific details of the individual situations due to the case before the Supreme Court. He has also said that he's not able to meet the detainees personally to discuss their grievances. I think we probably could debate that, but I don't want to debate that today. I'll accept that statement for now. But I want to stress that I think the motion before us gives the minister and the government a good alternative and a way past the impasse at this point to suggest that the correctional investigator have the opportunity to investigate and make recommendations on the situation.
The correctional investigator, Howard Sapers, is essentially the federal prison ombudsperson. He has a mandate under part III of the Corrections and Conditional Release Act to act as an ombudsperson for federal offenders.
I'll just read from his actual mandate statement:
The primary function of the Office is to investigate and bring resolution to individual offender complaints. The Office, as well, has a responsibility to review and make recommendations on the Correctional Service's policies and procedures associated with the areas of individual complaints to ensure that systemic areas of concern are identified and appropriately addressed.
The correctional investigator has also asked the government for responsibility in this area. He did that in his last annual report covering the period 2005-06.
I just want to read one paragraph of the four or five in his annual report that dealt with the situation at Kingston. He said:
The transfer of detainees from Ontario facilities to the Kingston holding centre means that the detainees will lose the benefit of a rigorous ombudsman’s legislative framework to file complaints about their care and humane treatment while in custody. The Office of the Correctional Investigator is concerned that the detainees will no longer have the benefits and legal protections afforded by ombudsman legislation. Pursuant to the Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture, a non-profit organization with no legislative framework, such as the Red Cross, is unlikely to meet the protocol’s requirement for domestic oversight.
So, Chair, we have heard, and I think we heard when we were there, that the Red Cross has been contracted to do oversight, but we also know that any recommendations they make are not made public, so we have no idea what they've said or what action was taken on it.
Chair, just in conclusion, I believe the lives of the men detained at the Kingston Immigration Holding Centre under security certificates are now in danger. I believe that very fundamentally. I also believe that serious health consequences are imminent, whether they lead to death or whether they can be ongoing. I spoke to all three of the men yesterday, and I'm particularly concerned for Mr. Mahjoub, who indicates that he's been very unwell for the last five or six days.
Finally, Chair, I believe this is a helpful motion. I think it gets us beyond the impasse; I think it offers a non-partisan and independent solution to the urgent problem before us all. I hope that committee members will be able to support it.
Thank you, Chair.