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In the name of the fight against crime
Canadas Conservative government increases states
repressive powers
By François Tremblay
23 November 2006
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Just as Canadas Conservative government invokes the hunt
for Taliban terrorists to justify a neo-colonial military
intervention in Afghanistan, it is seeking to increase the repressive
powers of the state under the cover of a fight against crime.
And just as elementary democratic rights (protection against
arbitrary detention, the right to remain silent) are trampled
on in the name of the war on terrorism, so longstanding
legal principles such as the presumption of innocence and the
independence of the judicial system from the executive power are
the first victims of the Conservatives campaign against
violent criminals.
Exaggerating the presence of crime in Canadian society, the
Conservatives have announced a series of modifications to the
criminal code that will increase the severity and length of sentences
and whose only predictable effect will be to increase the prison
population.
The most recently announced changes are a toughening of the
Youth Criminal Justice Act in order to inflict more severe sentences
on juveniles. The young must understand that when they commit
violent crime against others, they must be held wholly responsible
for their acts, declared Justice Minister Vic Toews at the
end of October.
Without revealing all the details of the governments
plans in this regard, Toews suggested that youngsters found guilty
of crimes could serve their sentence in prison rather than in
a rehabilitation center. When youth repeatedly commit criminal
acts, said Toews, we should not be embarrassed to
use our prison resources. These new measures could involve
the incarceration of 12-year-olds.
A few days earlier, Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced
another modification to the criminal code before an enthusiastic
audience of Toronto cops: people guilty of a third offence will
be automatically designated dangerous and high risk offendersmeaning
they could spend the rest of their days behind barsif that
third offence involved violence or the threat of violence.
The law presently allows the state to petition the courts to
declare an individual a high risk offender after any
offence involving a serious personal injury offence,
such as sexual aggression, threats to a third party or the infliction
of bodily injuries.
But it establishes a clear distinction between high risk
offenders and dangerous and high risk offenders.
The former are subject to the control of Canadas correctional
system for a period of 10 years after their sentence has been
completed, while the latter are imprisoned for an indefinite period,
that is either until death or they are deemed to no longer constitute
a danger to society.
On the basis of expert psychiatric reports, judges do declare
individuals high risk offenders on a relatively regular
basis. By contrast, the designation of dangerous and high
risk offender is seldom made as the consequences are so
severe. Hitherto, the requests to declare an individual a
dangerous and high risk offender have essentially been limited
to diagnosed psychopaths implicated in horrific cases of sexual
aggression.
The proposed change will have the effect of automatically declaring
an individual a dangerous and high risk offender who
commits a third offence of armed robbery. To escape being so designated
and possibly being imprisoned for life, the individual and legal
counsel will have to convince the courts that he or she is not
a dangerous and high risk offender. This represents
a significant reversal of the burden of proof: it was previously
up to the state or Crown to prove that an accused represented
such a threat to society that the individual should be imprisoned
indefinitely.
The president of the Canadian Police Officers Association,
Tony Cannavino, warmly welcomed Harpers announcement, commenting,
We can show you dozens of people who this could be applied
to in all jurisdictions.
According to the Conservatives draft legislation, only
the third offence must fall within the category of violent crimes
for the automatic dangerous and high risk offender
provision to take effect. The first two crimes need not have involved
violence or even the threat of violence. All that is required
is that they were punishable by a sentence of 10 years and that
their author got a sentence of at least two years.
The minority Conservative government also brought forward legislation
this fall to eliminate any possibility of persons being placed
under house arrest (i.e., given suspended prison terms)
if they had been found guilty of an offence punishable by a maximum
sentence of 10 years.
This law was promoted with great cynicism by the Conservatives.
Justice Minister Toews claimed that he was targeting only violent
crime. But in fact, the theft of goods valued at more than $5,000
and kissing someone without their consent (a form of sexual harassment)
are offences punishable by 10 years in prison. When the law fixes
a 10-year maximum sentence, it is because there is no stipulated
minimum. A person convicted of such an offence can receive a fine
or even a mere warning, the severe sentence of 10 years imprisonment
being reserved for the worst of criminals for the worst
of crimes.
Even if the opposition parties have largely embraced the Conservatives
law and order rhetoric and many of their proposals
to toughen sentences, they joined forces to defeated the Conservative
bill. Had they not, about 5,500 more people would have been jailed
annually.
Another Conservative bill now before parliament concerns the
mandatory minimum penalties imposed when a firearm is used in
committing a crime. The changes will have the effect of a fivefold
increase in the minimum sentence for a first offence (from one
to five years), a doubling of the minimum prison term for a second
offence (from three to seven years) and will raise the minimum
sentence for all other subsequent offences to 10 years. These
prison terms are added to the sentence for the main offence, for
example a theft or a threat committed with a firearm, and are
to be applied even if the firearm is not exhibited.
These new arrangements will involve an increase of 300 to 400
prisoners, costing the federal treasury about $250 million additional
per year, while depriving crime prevention programs of the same
amount of money. Even the justice minister has raised doubts about
the preventive character of such minimum sentences. Last August,
La Presse quoted Toews as having written that these
sentences do not have special deterrent effects or educative results
and they are no more effective than lighter sentences in combating
crime.
The government is also considering stripping judges of the
power to grant bail to persons accused of offences involving firearms,
meaning that persons accused of such crimes will have to remain
in prison until their trials are completed. This constitutes a
reversal of the elementary judicial principle: first of all liberty,
detention only when necessary.
The Conservatives are also proposing to increase the age of
sexual consent, from 14 to 16. Speaking at an event organized
in memory of Holly Jones, a 10-year-old girl who was killed by
a sexual predator, Minister Toews declared, In increasing
by two years the age of protection, the government is targeting
sexual predators who attack the most vulnerable members of society.
In fact, the government is using the worst of crimes committed
by a psychopath to introduce a change to the criminal code which
has nothing to do with this type of crime, but everything to do
with furthering the moralistic and repressive agenda of right-wing
religious groups, which constitute an important base of support
for the Conservative Party.
Someone accused of sexual aggression can say in his defence
that the alleged victim consented, but not if the victim is an
adolescent under 14. Holly Jones was 10 and her aggressor 35.
Moreover, consent could not have been invoked in this case since
the victim was killed.
In justifying their volley of law-and-order measures, the Conservatives
have repeatedly claimed that Canada is being ravaged by a crime
wave and especially an increase in youth and violent crime. But
government studies indicate the oppositean overall drop
in crime, especially the number of offenses being committed by
young people.
According to a report released this July by Statistics Canada,
The level of crime in Canada, which is based on the number
of cases reported to the police, fell by 5 percent last year.
The report concludes that since 1999 the overall level of violent
crime has not changed, even if there was an increase in 2005.
According to the reports data, among the young, the level
of crime fell 6 percent in 2005, the second consecutive year in
which the number of crimes committed by young people fell.
The statistics show an increase in certain types of crime,
but not an explosion which would require exceptional measures.
Actually, the level of crime, even of violent crime, remains below
the historic peaks recorded in the early 1990s and continues to
fall overall.
The Harper government claims that all of the announced changes
have as their aim maintaining security on the streets and
communities. In reality their purpose is to spread a climate
of fear to justify putting into place repressive police and judicial
measures. Federal Minister of Public Security Stockwell Day recently
announced, for example, the recruitment of a thousand new Royal
Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) agents, as well as the refurbishing
of the national police school so as to turn out more police officers.
If the Conservative government distorts the reality of crime,
it is because it wants to remove from political discussion any
conception of the social causes of crime. In a previous period,
the conception that crime has social roots and reflects the failings
of society encouraged an approach based on rehabilitation, rather
than punishment, and measures to combat poverty and mental illness.
But the ruling elite has increasingly repudiated any notion of
societal responsibility for poverty and other social ills. Since
the end of the 1970s, it has been engaged in an unrelenting offensive
on workers jobs and rights.
Such a policymassive decreases in taxes for the rich
and savage cuts in social programs, militarism and neo-colonialism
abroadis fuelling growing anger amongst wide layers of the
population.
Through its law and order campaign the Harper government
is strengthening the repressive powers of the state. It is also
seeking to divert popular discontent by railing on about the evil
incarnated by hardened criminals and to develop a popular base
for its reactionary agenda by wooing the police and appealing
to the prejudices of the most backward social elements.
See Also:
Arar rendition case: Canadian
government accepts non-apology from Bush administration
[4 November 2006]
Maher Arars ordeal,
the Harper government and the assault on democratic rights
[5 October 2006]
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