Thank you, Mr. Chair.
It's a great pleasure for us to be here today. I will say that I am the only one with a prepared statement, so we will move to questions and answers as soon as I finish.
I'd like to begin by emphasizing the importance the government attaches to the situation at Camp Ashraf. Officials in the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade have been following developments in the camp for many years, and we are deeply concerned about the future well-being of the residents. In addition, the Minister of Foreign Affairs has shown a keen interest in the situation. He has been monitoring the developments closely and has instructed officials to take a number of actions, which I will allude to later in my remarks.
I'd like to start by saying a few words about the MeK so that we have a shared understanding of the context. The Mujahedin e-Khalq, the MeK, or the People's Mujahedin Organization of Iran, the PMOI, was founded by Iranian Marxists in the 1960s to oppose western influence in Iran and to overthrow the shah. After the Iranian revolution in 1979, the MeK's Marxist ideology ran counter to the new regime under Ayatollah Khomeini. Its leadership was executed and the group was driven from Iran.
In 1986, at the height of the Iran-Iraq war, Saddam Hussein welcomed the MeK to Iraq, owing to their shared opposition to the Iranian regime. It established its new headquarters at Camp Ashraf, and the MeK, from there, carried out armed operations against Iran and cooperated with Saddam in suppressing uprisings of Iraqi Kurds and Shiites in southern Iraq. Many of MeK's terrorist attacks, which included assassinations, hostage takings, and hit-and-run raids, were aimed at government buildings in crowded cities where civilians were caught in the crossfire. Included among the MeK's litany of terrorist acts are the near simultaneous attacks in 1992 on Iranian government properties in 13 countries.
Canada was one of those countries, with 40 MeK supporters wielding sticks, crowbars, and mallets in an attack against the Iranian embassy here in Ottawa that left several people wounded. Members of the MeK leadership are widely believed to have used intimidation tactics and false pretenses to recruit new members to the camp, who in turn were forbidden from communicating with family members outside the camp.
The MeK has historically refused to cooperate with the Iraqi government or to allow Iraq to exercise its authority inside the camp. The MeK was added to the U.S.'s list of terrorist entities in 1997 and to Canada's in 2005. In December 2010, the Government of Canada completed its two-year review of terrorist entities listed under the Criminal Code, at which time the Governor in Council, on the recommendation of the Minister of Public Safety, decided that the MeK should remain a listed entity.
The Government of Iraq first announced its intention to close Camp Ashraf two years ago, later deciding on the end of 2011 as the deadline. The decision is based on article 7 of the Iraqi constitution, which prohibits the presence of any terrorist entity in Iraqi territory.
Iraq sees the MeK not just as unconstitutional but also as a threat to its national and regional security. The Government of Iraq contends that no government would agree to allow an organization to remain in its territory against the will and laws of the host state. Despite the international outcry voiced by Camp Ashraf's well-organized Paris-based lobby of international sympathizers, the camp's closure is supported by many Iraqis. These Iraqis are not limited to defected MeK members who understand the harsh living conditions in the camp but also include regular Iraqis who associate the MeK with Saddam Hussein's outlawed Baath Party and who have not forgotten its acts of terrorism against Iraqi Kurds and Shiites.
The Iraqi government has provided repeated assurances that Camp Ashraf residents will not be forcibly transferred to a country in which they would face persecution and that they will be humanely treated in accordance with Iraq's laws, constitution, and international obligations. The April 8, 2011, raid by Iraqi security forces that left 36 members of the camp dead was deeply troubling and completely unacceptable. This episode of recent history must not be repeated. However, in the months since then, the Iraqi government has cooperated with the international community to ensure that the security and humanitarian needs of the camp's residents are met. Since the announcement of the closure, the Iraqi government has demonstrated its willingness to cooperate with EU states, the United States, Iraq's neighbours, and Iran in order to resettle Ashrafi residents outside Iraq.
Some 3,400 people reside at the camp, including families with children. A significant portion of the residents who hold dual nationalities have already left Iraq, including nine of eleven Canadians who were repatriated on November 16 and 17. Canadian embassy staff have experienced the Iraqi government's compliance first-hand and attest to the willingness of the government to facilitate the safe transfer of residents to the airport.
The Government of Iraq has also allowed international organizations such as the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq, UNAMI, and the International Committee of the Red Cross to visit the camp on a very regular basis. In fact, UNAMI has been visiting weekly of late. These groups monitor living conditions, facilitate communication with family members, and provide supplies for the residents.
However, some of the camp's residents, including two Canadians, still refuse to leave. The Iraqi government is participating in talks with the United Nations on how to move these remaining residents to another location in Iraq, as an alternative to expelling them from the country.
Many of the remaining residents do wish to leave and are applying for refugee status. They are being assessed on a case by case basis by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. The UNHCR has been working tirelessly with the Iraqi government to process asylum requests. The commission eased an original condition for applicants: they are now required only to renounce violence, rather than the MEK specifically. But with less than a month left, time is running out, and UNAMI expects that a large number of applicants will not be processed in time.
Recognizing this, the UNHCR has asked the Iraqi government to postpone the closure of the camp to allow sufficient time to process all the applications. In his latest report on the situation in Iraq, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon appealed to the government of Iraq to allow more time and to find neutral space for that processing to be done. He also urged the leadership of camp Ashraf to be flexible and cooperative in finding a lasting solution.
Canada, the U.S., and the EU have been echoing these requests.
So far, the government of Iraq has refused to grant this extension.
Canada, through our embassy in Jordan, has followed the developments in Camp Ashraf closely through regular visits over the past few years. While the 11 Canadians in the camp had long denied Canadian offers of consular assistance, they finally expressed their desire to leave in June of this year. Officials from DFAIT and Passport Canada worked together last month to facilitate the repatriation of nine of these Canadian citizens from Camp Ashraf. The remaining two decided to remain in the camp.
Our efforts at Camp Ashraf go beyond simply providing consular assistance. Embassy staff members have made numerous visits to the camp, monitoring the living conditions, listening to concerns expressed by residents, and reporting on key events.
I would add that those visits are made despite the considerable risk to the security of our officials given the security environment in Iraq itself.
The most recent visit was on September 26, and an official from our embassy in Jordan will visit the camp again tomorrow, December 14.
DFAIT officials have used opportunities to raise concerns about the safety of camp residents at the United Nations, with European and American colleagues, with officials from neighbouring states, with Iraqi officials in Baghdad, and with the Iraqi embassy here in Ottawa.
Our ambassador to Iraq, who is based in Amman, raised the issue of the camp with Iraqi officials during a visit at the end of November. Minister Kenney raised it with the Minister of Displacement and Migration during meetings in Geneva earlier this month. Our ambassador to the European Union discussed our concerns with the EU special adviser on Camp Ashraf as well. And I and my officials have met several times with the Iraqi ambassador in the last few weeks alone.
Our concerns are in avoiding the forcible refoulement of Ashrafi residents to a country where they would face harm or persecution, and avoiding the possibility of violence around the camp's closure.
We are discussing—with our allies, UNSC members, the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq, and other UN agencies—the best ways to ensure the residents of Camp Ashraf are in fact safe, including such options as stepped-up monitoring, a protection force, or international human rights observers.
CIDA has played an important role, too. In addition to the $300 million that Canada provided to Iraq's post-war construction, CIDA has provided support to the International Committee of the Red Cross, as well as to the UNHCR.
In the remaining weeks leading up to the closure, DFAIT officials will continue to urge the Government of Iraq to extend the deadline to allow the UNHCR sufficient time to process refugee claims. We will also seek to ensure that the human rights of camp residents are protected during and after the camp's closure.
We will urge the Government of Iraq to ensure that the camp is closed in a way that respects its obligations under international humanitarian and human rights law, and we will be continuing to monitor this situation closely in coming weeks and months.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.