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WSWS : News
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America : Canada
Canadas Arar inquiry prepares to whitewash intelligence
establishment
By David Adelaide
3 June 2004
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Public hearings into the case of Maher Arara Canadian
citizen who with the complicity of Canadian authorities fell victim
to the US governments practice of rendering persons to a
third country so they can be subjected to tortureare set
to begin this month. But the terms that the federal Liberal government
and presiding Judge Dennis R. OConnor have laid down for
the public inquiry into the Arar affair indicate that its real
purpose is to protect Canadas security-intelligence establishment
and bolster public confidence in the war on terrorism,
which in Canada, as elsewhere, has been used to justify sweeping
new powers for the state.
In September 2002, Arar, a Syrian-born Canadian, was detained
by US authorities while in transit through New York. He was then
deported to Syria, where he was imprisoned for a year without
charge and repeatedly tortured. Arar was one of a large number
of terrorist suspectsnews reports have spoken of several
hundredwhom US officials rendered to Syria,
Egypt, Pakistan and other countries known to practice torture
so they could be interrogated without running afoul of US and
international laws banning torture.
There is every indication that Canadian authorities were complicit
in Arars ordeal. US officials have repeatedly said that
it was their Canadian counterparts who first fingered Arar as
a terrorist suspect. Paul Celluci, US ambassador to Canada, went
so far as to say that Canadian authorities would not have been
unhappy to see Arar deported to Syria since they lacked legal
grounds to arrest and hold him in Canada.
During Arars imprisonment in Syria, Canadian Security
and Intelligence Service (CSIS) agents traveled to Damascus, so
that they could be briefed on the confession the Syrian military
had beaten out of Arar. Then, when his Syrian captors released
Arar saying the US had failed to substantiate its claims that
he is a terrorist, unidentified elements within Canadas
intelligence establishment released details of this forced confession
to the media, in a desperate attempt to slander Arar and thereby
justify their own actions.
The Liberal government initially resisted calls for a public
inquiry, but changed its mind after a Royal Canadian Mounted Police
raid on the home of an Ottawa Citizen journalist who reported
the leaked information about Arars confession
provoked a public outcry.
Having been forced to bend to public pressure for an inquiry,
the Liberal governments priority has now become ensuring
that it does not countenance any consideration of the real context
in which the persecution of Arar unfoldedan unprecedented
assault on democratic rights carried out by Western governments
in the name of combating terrorism. Instead, the terms of reference
set down for the inquiry confine it to consideration of the role
played by Canadian intelligence forces in the ordeal suffered
by Maher Arar, and Maher Arar alone.
In a preliminary hearing, Judge OConnor cited this narrow
criterion in order to deny standing in the inquiry to several
Syrian-Canadian men who had also been rendered to
Syria, or whose relatives were rendered to Syria. With standing
would have come funding and the right to question government officials.
One of the men denied standing, Ahmad Abou-El-Maati, underwent
an ordeal that is directly tied up with Arars experience.
According to the transcripts of the hearing to determine standing,
El-Maati, a 39-year old Toronto truck driver, says that CSIS,
the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP), and the RCMP were harassing
and spying on him from April 2001. A CSIS threat to block him
sponsoring his Syrian wife to come to Canada led him to fly to
Syria, where he was promptly arrested and jailed. While incarcerated,
El-Maati was forced to confess to plotting to bomb Canadas
Parliament buildings, and in the process he falsely implicated
Ararwhich may well have been what led to Arars subsequent
mistreatment at the hands of Canadian and US authorities.
El-Maati is still expected to be called as a witness during
the inquiry. The two other men denied standing, Youssef Almalki
and Muayyed Nureddin, are not. According to the Globe &
Mail, El-Maati has denounced the inquiry as a cover-up and
has filed a legal challenge after being denied standing.
When it came to the security and intelligence establishment,
Judge OConnor gave a much more liberal interpretation of
the inquirys terms of reference. He ceded to an OPP request
for standing in the Arar inquiry on the grounds that the OPP had
participated in a national security task force with the RCMP.
In the hearing on standing, counsel for the OPP emphasized their
concern that information sharing between police forces not be
jeopardized.
The inquirys restricted terms of reference and OConnors
selective interpretation of them reflect the governments
desire to placate the security-intelligence establishment which
begrudges and fears any public scrutiny into its affairs, however
limited and stage-managed. At the same time, it reveals the true
goal of the inquiryto establish a smoother, more efficient
apparatus of repression. It should be recalled that the Mcdonald
Commission into RCMP wrongdoing resulted in the government legalizing
a whole number of illegal police practices and creating CSIS as
a professional and more politically savvy spy service.
Unsurprisingly, the terms of reference established for the
inquiry explicitly direct it to take all steps necessary
to prevent disclosure of information that, if it were disclosed
to the public, would, in the opinion of the Commissioner, be injurious
to international relations, national defence or national security...
Before the public hearings begin there will be a series of
in camera hearings with only government representatives
and the judge present. In other words, the government is giving
itself a free rein to conceal information damaging to itself,
to its security and intelligence forces, or to its relationship
with the US authorities.
See Also:
Canadian elections: campaign
hype cannot mask popular disaffection
[29 May 2004]
Canadas Liberal government
calls public inquiry into treatment of Maher Arar
[4 February 2004]
Canada-US agreement whitewashes
Arar case
[24 January 2004]
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]
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