Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
If you permit me, I'll begin by thanking your subcommittee for your continued engagement with the ongoing conflicts in Syria and Iraq, specifically the mass atrocities being perpetrated by government forces and non-state actors such as Daesh. I'm honoured to testify before you concerning our organized efforts to combat violations of international criminal and humanitarian law, ICHL, through the application of individual criminal responsibility.
By way of introduction, I would reiterate that my name is indeed Bill Wiley. I am the executive director of the CIJA. My testimony today will introduce the CIJA to you and in turn afford you an overview of our international criminal investigations and related work in Syria and Iraq, which Canada's strong leadership has done much to facilitate.
For some years, governments and non-governmental organizations have raised the alarm in response to the widespread and systematic disregard on Syrian and Iraqi territory for the precepts of ICHL. In addressing you, my role is not to elaborate on these facts, which are already well known. Rather, I propose to speak to the establishment of individual criminal responsibility for these egregious crimes and the role that Canada is currently playing to ensure that those most responsible for the perpetration of core international crimes are held accountable for their acts before a court of law.
Furthermore, my role, as I see it, is to correct statements, oft-made by advocacy groups in particular, that nothing is being done to investigate egregious offences. As such, I will take a moment in this opening address to highlight the concrete steps being taken by the brave men and women employed by the CIJA in Syria since 2011 and in Iraq since 2014 to secure justice for the victims of the crimes being perpetrated in their own countries.
Finally, I shall touch upon additional initiatives that can be implemented, not least with the support of Canada, to put into place a wider array of criminal justice accountability options.
What, then, is the CIJA? Stated succinctly, the CIJA is an international non-governmental organization with a mandate from its donors to undertake international criminal investigations in the midst of the ongoing conflicts. The CIJA's investigations conform to the evidentiary standards applied within any international and western domestic criminal law jurisdiction. Our modus operandi reflects the CIJA senior leadership's long experience gained in the service of international and hybrid courts as well as within domestic war crimes units such as that situated in our own country at the Department of Justice.
The CIJA's 150 personnel collect evidence to the highest legal standards and undertake analysis with an eye to preparing, as we do, dossiers inculpating ranking individuals for present-day and future criminal prosecution in domestic as well as international jurisdictions. As such, the CIJA is far more akin to the investigative division of an international prosecutor's office than it is to a human rights organization. As you might imagine, the fact that the CIJA undertakes criminal investigations in its capacity as a non-profit foundation, as opposed to a public institution, renders the CIJA truly unique.
With respect to the CIJA's evidence collection, our analytical interest extends beyond merely documenting prima facie crimes. The United Nations and various NGOs already undertake such work for informational and advocacy purposes. Rather, the CIJA's principal focus falls upon collecting, corroborating, and holding what is known in our field of law as “linkage evidence”—that is, evidence that links high- and highest-level political, military, and security intelligence actors to offences committed by lower-level perpetrators.
Linkage evidence is central to the building of ICHL cases for prosecution. Establishing the linkage component of the cases that we build for current and future prosecution absorbs roughly 90% of the CIJA's human and material resources committed to any given investigation. It is in this respect that the CIJA complements most effectively the ongoing and future work of domestic as well as international prosecutorial authorities. It is likewise in this respect that the CIJA is not to be confused with a human rights organization, focused as human rights organizations are on questions of victimization rather than upon the establishment of a responsibility therefore.
CIJA personnel deployed in Syria and Iraq, roughly 50% of the CIJA complement, take considerable but managed physical risks to ensure that, unlike in past conflicts, linkage cases are established whilst the subject conflicts are under way. We do this to ensure that those most responsible for core international crimes do not go unpunished—to wit, that perpetrators are not left in positions of authority for any longer than is rendered necessary by political, diplomatic, and sometimes military considerations.
Whilst the CIJA's work shall prove to be instrumental to future international criminal trials, I regard it as important for the subcommittee to understand that other criminal justice options already exist. Evidence collected by the CIJA is central to facilitating ongoing criminal justice efforts in national jurisdictions where perpetrators have been apprehended, particularly in the European Schengen zone. At the present time, the CIJA is assisting no fewer than 12 western countries in the domestic prosecution of Syrian regime officials, returning Islamic State fighters, and other members of extremist groups.
During the year to date, the CIJA has answered in excess of 30 domestic requests for assistance pertaining to almost 400 individual targets under investigation by national authorities. These domestic jurisdictions in the west remain the only current avenue for criminal justice accountability for core international crimes, at least as far as Syria is concerned. While there is much more to be done, the fact remains that a good deal is already being done by public institutions and, if you will permit me to reiterate, by the CIJA.
In Syria and Iraq, the CIJA has several dozen investigators on the ground handling multiple operations throughout these countries. Further staff are deployed in support roles in neighbouring states. Most CIJA investigators are Syrian and Iraqi nationals, whose capacity the CIJA has spent many years developing, not e least with financial assistance from Canada. Working under the supervision of international personnel with long experience gained in The Hague and elsewhere, the primary mission of these investigators is to collect voluminous amounts of information concerning the functioning of the Syrian regime, as well as the Islamic State, for evidentiary exploitation by CIJA political structure, military, and legal analysts.
To date, our personnel have moved into secure storage in the west in excess of 700,000 original pages of Syrian regime documentation; conducted hundreds of victim, and most especially insider, witness interviews; and collected other forms of physical and electronic evidence. Additionally, the CIJA continues to build a names database of Syrian regime political, military, and security intelligence officials. This system currently holds in excess of 1.2 million names. A distinct database of foreign terrorist fighters holds several thousand names.
Taken as a whole, the CIJA information and evidence holdings, as well as its investigative reach into Syria and Iraq, constitute a rich informational resource for public officials in countries such as Canada, informing as we do a wider range of criminal justice accountability, asylum screening, and targeted sanctions efforts. The CIJA systems will in future be utilized during state-building and concomitant lustration processes. The point I should like to make here is that the CIJA does not seek to supplant public institutions, and nor are we an advocacy body. Rather, the CIJA is designed to serve as a tool that public officials are free to take up as they see fit.
In Syria, the CIJA is largely self-supporting. In Iraq, CIJA investigations are undertaken pursuant to a memorandum of understanding with the Kurdistan regional government. On the basis of this MOU, the CIJA is able to secure crucial logistical and security support within Iraq at no cost. Working from various locations in the north, the CIJA examines, amongst other issues, the atrocity crimes perpetrated by the Islamic State against ethnic Yazidis, Christians, and other minority groups of particular concern to the subcommittee.
In its first Iraq-centred prosecution case file, completed several months ago, the CIJA identified two dozen suspects involved in orchestrating Islamic State slavery operations, which, as you know, have resulted in appalling instances of sexual violence and servitude. In sum, the seven prosecutable case files completed to date by the CIJA, over the last three years or more, identify several dozen individual perpetrators, reaching to the highest reaches of the Syrian regime and the Islamic State.
In addition to the criminal justice options being exercised in North America and Europe at the present time, there is an immediate road to large-scale justice in Iraq for the victims of Daesh offences. I refer to the fact that there is every prospect for Islamic State perpetrators to be put on trial in a specially designated court situated in northern Iraq, working to western standards of due process, for crimes such as the sexual offences perpetrated against ethnic Yazidi women and girls.
For some time, the CIJA has been leading the effort to establish such a specialized war crimes chamber within an existing Iraqi court. Our proposal has already garnered support from the relevant Kurdistan regional authorities, and we are optimistic that the Government of Iraq might soon agree to this idea.
Suffice it to say, by way of an introduction to this concept of Iraq-based fair trials for the Daesh perpetrators of core international crimes, most of the elements are already in place to commence the prosecution of Islamic State personnel currently detained on Iraqi territory.
In closing, I should like to highlight the fact that Canada is one of the very few states contributing concretely to efforts that are rendering possible criminal justice for core international crimes. More to the point, Canada continues to contribute generously to an undertaking that is facilitating the prosecution of Syrian regime and Islamic State perpetrators at the present time and that, concomitantly, has laid much of the foundation for the future international prosecution of the senior-most leadership of both the Syrian regime and the Islamic State.
I look forward to your questions. Thank you again for your continued interest in the wars in Syria and Iraq, not least in the context of criminal justice accountability.