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Canadas Liberal government calls public inquiry into
treatment of Maher Arar
By Keith Jones
4 February 2004
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After months of insisting that there was no need to do so,
Canadas Liberal government has established a public inquiry
into the Maher Arar affair.
A Canadian citizen of Syrian birth, Arar was detained by US
authorities while in transit through New York in September 2002,
then deported to Syria where he was imprisoned for almost a year
and repeatedly tortured. US Attorney-General John Ashcroft has
claimed Arar was deported only after the Syrian government provided
assurances he would not be maltreated. But this is belied by reports
in the Washington Post citing high-level US officials lauding
the practice of rendering terrorist suspects to countries
that employ torture.
There is much evidence that Canadas security establishment
was complicit in delivering Arar into the hands of his Syrian
torturersa flagrant violation of both Canadian and international
law.
* US officials have repeatedly said that Arar, a computer technician
with a US work permit, first came to their attention because of
intelligencein fact an amalgam of guilt by association and
innuendosupplied by Canadian security agencies.
* The US Ambassador to Canada, Paul Cellucci, has said Canadian
authorities indicated to Washington that they would not be unhappy
to see Arar deported to Syria, since they lacked legal grounds
to arrest him if he were returned to Canada.
* Canadian consular officials who were in contact with Arar
while he was under detention in New York dismissed his fearsprompted
by threats from US officialsthat he could be deported to
Syria.
* Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) officers reportedly
travelled to Damascus to be briefed by the Syrian military on
the confession it had beaten out of Arar.
* Since Arars release, elements within Canadas
security establishment have continued to try to smear his nameand
thereby defend their own roleleaking details of his confession
to the media.
Nevertheless, till last week, first Jean Chrétien, and
then his successor as Canadas Prime Minister, Paul Martin,
stubbornly resisted calls for a public inquiry into how Arar came
to be tortured in Syria. Chrétien claimed that since the
deportation of Arar was carried out by US authorities, there was
nothing for Canadian officials to answer for. Martin, for his
part, maintained that a public inquiry was not needed because
the [CSIS] Security Intelligence Review Committee and the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Complaints Commissioner were carrying
out their own investigations of the Arar affair. Yet the Security
Intelligence Review Committee conducts its work entirely in private
and the RCMP Complaints Commissioner has repeatedly complained
that the forces top brass has stymied her work and that
she lacks the tools to investigate national security cases.
Unprecedented police raid against Ottawa
Citizen journalist
What appears to have changed Martins mind is the public
outcry occasioned by an RCMP police raid on the home and office
of Juliet ONeill, an Ottawa Citizen journalist who
has written on the Arar affair. On the morning of January 21,
ten RCMP officers descended on ONeills home and, after
a meticulous search, carted off boxes of her papers and computer
disks. The raid was a grievous attack on the freedom of the press,
doubly so as ONeill is under threat of being charged with
having violated the draconian Security of Information Act.
The RCMP were reputedly looking for information on who had
leaked details of Arars confession to ONeill. (That
ONeill reported the leak was her responsibility as a journalist;
that she chose to treat the information supplied to her as justifying
the polices suspicions of Arar, rather than highlighting
the fact that elements within Canadas security apparatus
are carrying on a vendetta against Arar using materials obtained
through torture, however, is not to her credit.)
In any event, it would appear that the police raid was a heavy-handed
attempt by the RCMP top brass to convince the government and public
that it was not responsible for the smear campaign against Arar.
Instead, it forced the government on the defensiveto the
RCMPs dismay, Martin declared ONeill was guilty of
nothingand caused the corporate media to question for the
first time the battery of anti-democratic anti-terrorist
legislation Canada adopted in the months immediately following
the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
For example, the press has now noted that the RCMP has been
given a host of new national security powers and responsibilities
without any provision for independent, let alone parliamentary,
oversight of its activities in this area.
The scope of the newly-announced Arar inquiry, which is to
be headed by the judge who led the judicial inquiry into the 2000
Walkerton water tragedy, is as not yet clear, as the terms of
reference are still being negotiated between the government and
Justice Dennis OConnor. However, Government officials have
said that as the inquiry deals with national security some testimony
will likely be given in and remain secret, and that some of the
inquirys findings may never be publicly revealed.
In announcing the establishment of the inquiry, Deputy Prime
Minister Anne McLellan was at pains to reassure Washington that
it will in no way weaken or detract from the RCMPs and CSISs
cooperation with their US counterparts. We certainly want
to assure our allies, affirmed McLellan, ... that
it is absolutely key that nothing this public inquiry does calls
into question our ability to collect and share information under
the appropriate protocols which exist, and that we can be trusted
with that information. The next day, McLellan, who is also
the Minister for Public Security and Emergency Preparedness, travelled
to Washington to meet with Vice-President Dick Cheney, Attorney-General
Ashcroft, and Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge.
Martin, meanwhile, continues to insist that he has seen no
evidence of wrongdoing by any members of Canadas security
establishment. Now that we have a public inquiry,
Martin told a January 28 news conference, undoubtedly all
the information will be coming forward, but I have seen nothing
that would change that opinion.
Arar has expressed hope that the inquiry will clear his namehe
has been unable to find work since returning to Canadaand
will recommend that he be compensated by the government for his
ordeal. Certainly he is owed that.
No one, however, should be under any illusion that the inquirys
principal purpose is other than to restore the credibility of
the countrys national security apparatus, which is an integral
and vital element of the capitalist state.
Traditionally governments in Canada and other British-style
parliamentary democracies have used public inquiries as a means
of defusing political crises. Only last week, in Britain, the
Hutton inquiry came to the defence of Tony Blair, whitewashing
his governments role in the death of whistle-blower Dr.
David Kelly and, more fundamentally, its use of phoney intelligence
in justifying the illegal invasion of Iraq. In 1977, the then
Trudeau Liberal government responded to a series of politically
damaging revelations about RCMP illegal activities directed against
leftists and Quebec nationalists by establishing the McDonald
Royal Commission into RCMP wrongdoing. While the McDonald Commission
did shed light on the routine character of RCMP lawbreaking, its
principal recommendations and outcome were the creation of a stronger,
more politically astute, intelligence service and legislation
that made many of the RCMPs illegal activities lawful.
Even so, the Martin Liberal governments decision to set
up a public inquiry into the Arar case has caused consternation
within the ranks of CSIS and the RCMP and will no doubt exacerbate
the already significant tensions between the government and the
security-intelligence establishment. With the support of the right-wing
Official Opposition and the National Post, elements
within CSIS and the RCMP have repeatedly criticized the Liberals
over the past five years for being soft on terrorism.
In this regard, it is significant that Mondays Post
gave prominence to warnings from a long-time RCMP Security Service
and CSIS officer, now retired, that an inquiry into the Arar affair
would harm the operational interests and capabilities of
the RCMP and CSIS, undermine security cooperation with the
US, and possibly cause the security establishment to turn on the
government. To pursue a public inquiry into the Arar affair,
wrote Peter Marwitz to Prime Minister Martin, is to court
political dangers to your government leading into the next election.
See Also:
Canada-US agreement whitewashes
Arar case
[24 January 2004]
Under new prime minister,
Canadas Liberal government veers right
[19 December 2003]
Canadian authorities
complicit in Arars illegal detention and torture
[18 November 2003]
The Maher Arar case:
Washingtons practice of torture by proxy
[18 November 2003]
Washington Post
shrugs its shoulders over torture victim case
[13 November 2003]
Canadian anti-terrorism
law attacks democratic rights
[20 November 2001]
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