Thank you for this opportunity.
I'm speaking to you today as chair of the Canadian Coalition for the Rights of Children, but it's relevant for my testimony that I have been a board member of the Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers. I was also coordinator of the children and armed conflict working group at the time the optional protocol on children and armed conflict was adopted. I co-chaired the civil society group at the first international conference on war-affected children, held in Winnipeg in 2000, and at the UN special session on children in 2002.
As a co-founder of the Watchlist on Children and Armed Conflict, which is an international monitoring group, I was engaged in the process leading up to each of the six Security Council resolutions on children in armed conflict.
So this adds up to ten years of working on this issue and trying to improve protection for the rights of children caught in wars.
From this background, I would like to present three points for your consideration today. The first one relates to the best interests of the child.
The best interests of the child are to be the primary consideration in all actions concerning children. This central principle of the Convention on the Rights of the Child is repeated in the optional protocol on children and armed conflict, both of which were ratified by Canada. It is central for dealing with child soldiers. The term “child soldiers” applies to more than those who fight on the front lines. It applies to persons under the age of 18 who are associated with fighting forces, whether they worked as carriers, as spies, or as captains on the front line.
Omar Khadr clearly fits in this group. The primary principle for your examination of this issue should be the best interests of the child, since he was under 18 at the time he was associated with fighting forces.
I have not seen an explanation of how Canada's current policy implements this principle. In November the government response to a Senate report on the rights of children stated that all policies relating to children are assessed for compliance with Canada's obligations under the Convention on the Rights of the Child. This committee may wish to ask for a copy of the assessment that was done to show that the position on Omar Khadr complies with the principle of the best interests of the child, to which Canada subscribes.
May I suggest to you that any assessment based on the best interests of the child, the optional protocol, and the relevant Security Council resolutions would point toward a plan for rehabilitation and reintegration.
Article 6 of the optional protocol states--and I'm quoting--“States parties shall take all feasible measures to ensure that persons within their jurisdiction recruited or used in hostilities contrary to the present protocol are demobilized or otherwise released from service.” This is the important line: “States parties shall, when necessary, accord to such persons all appropriate assistance for their physical and psychological recovery and their social reintegration.”
This approach would be in the best interests of Omar Khadr, who was a Canadian child recruited into a fighting force. He remains a Canadian citizen.
But let's consider for a moment what has been stated as the primary consideration of the government--diplomatic relations with the United States. That is also important. The United States adopted the optional protocol on child soldiers even though it has never ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child. I think that's significant, because it means this decision was a very deliberate policy choice by the United States.
Article 7 of the optional protocol commits states to helping other states fulfill their commitments. If Canada repatriates Omar Khadr with a reintegration plan, we would in fact be helping the United States live up to the commitments it has made as well as keeping Canadian commitments.
The second point I would like to ask you to consider is the best interests of Canada, including the interests of the Canadian military. Canadian soldiers do not like to meet child soldiers when they're deployed.
The Department of National Defence was not a strong proponent of the law against child soldiers when we were discussing it and it was adopted, but many, especially those who have seen child soldiers in action from Afghanistan to the Congo, now want to see it upheld. Undermining it is not in their best interests.
From the perspective of Canadian communities, the standard for good practice is a plan for rehabilitation and reintegration that addresses the specific situation of the child and the context. Such plans combine short-term intensive treatment and then longer-term community-based support.
Research has documented that returning child soldiers with a plan is better than without a plan. There is an emerging standard of good practice although this is still a new field. For an easy-to-read resource, I would suggest Child Soldiers, by Dr. Mike Wessells, a child psychologist who has developed and implemented programs that combine social-psychological treatment, education, and livelihood training through working for the Christian Children's Fund. He has experience also with programs in Afghanistan.
This issue does not need to be a partisan issue in Canada. All parties with strong public support supported Canada being the first country to adopt the optional protocol. In 2007, under the current government, Canada and 40 countries adopted something called the Paris principles and guidelines on children associated with armed forces or armed groups. Article 7 of that document spells out specifically that children captured by an opposing armed force retain their human rights as children, and specifically should not be subjected to torture or other cruel and inhuman treatment. It also states that all measures to promote physical and psychological recovery and social reintegration must be taken.
Article 3 spells out, as Hilary said, that children accused of crimes should be considered primarily to be victims, and those who recruit children should be prosecuted as criminals. Article 3.7 states that wherever possible alternatives to judicial proceedings must be sought. This approach would be in line with the standards of good practice for juvenile justice in Canada as well, as Hilary has mentioned.
The third point I'd like you to consider is the global best interests for peace and security. I would now draw your attention to six Security Council resolutions that state that protecting the rights of children caught in armed conflicts is a matter of international peace and security. They are resolutions 1261, 1314, 1379, 1460, 1593, and 1612, adopted in a timeframe from 1999 to 2005.
Canada worked for and supported each of these resolutions, each one stronger than the last. All of them call for the reintegration of former child soldiers and the prosecution of those who recruit and abuse children. That is the course laid out in Security Council resolutions. The last one, resolution 1612, puts in place very specific implementation mechanisms, because the Security Council was very concerned about continuing violations and strongly committed to achieving compliance in order to end the most egregious violations, including the use of child soldiers.
So we are asking Canada to do only what other countries are asked to do. If Canada does not follow Security Council resolutions, why should other countries? Other countries have been asked to take back and reintegrate young people who have committed offences as child soldiers, and they have done so. There are also cases in which this was not done, and young people joined other fighting forces, creating instability elsewhere. This is a security issue.
Finally, if Canada wants to have a principled, consistent, integrated foreign policy, then the policy on Omar Khadr needs review and revision. Canada is supporting programs in Colombia and northern Uganda to help in the reintegration of young people who are also involved with groups listed as terrorist organizations. Community acceptance is a challenge there too, as much as it is in Canada. But all those efforts are undermined if Canada does not do the same thing when the child involved happens to be a Canadian child.
We have letters from the former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Peter MacKay; the current minister, Maxime Bernier; the former Minister of International Development, Josée Verner; and the current Minister of International Cooperation, Bev Oda. All say that implementation of Security Council resolutions and other policies on children and armed conflict remain a high priority for Canada. So implementing at home those policies we promote elsewhere is essential.
The Omar Khadr case is not isolated or exceptional. It's a bellwether case. How it is handled will have serious implications for the future of the international laws that so many Canadians worked so hard to put in place. It is drawing increasing international attention and has the potential to undermine all the good work done by Canada and Canadians to protect the rights of children. Within a few weeks, a new global report on child soldiers will be released. Some progress is being made. The Omar Khadr case will be cited as potentially undermining these achievements. A change in Canadian policy before the release of that report would show Canadian leadership and encourage other countries to protect the rights of children caught in conflicts.
Finally, I will remind this committee that implementation of the Security Council resolutions on protection of children is widely seen as a step toward implementation of the responsibility to protect, a policy direction endorsed by all parties and the Canadian public. So the issue before you is a very important one. Canada has a choice: it can either undermine progress made toward protection of children, or it can show leadership in the best interests of the child, the military, youth justice in Canada, and global peace and security. Developing a reintegration plan and asking the United States to repatriate Omar Khadr with such a plan is the best way for both countries to respect commitments they made to children, and to contribute to global peace and security.
Thank you.