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Canada: RCMP chief accepts Arar commission findings,
the better to reject them
By Richard Dufour
3 October 2006
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Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Commissioner Giuliano
Zaccardelli told a parliamentary committee last Thursday that
he accepts the conclusions of the government-appointed Commission
of Inquiry into the Case of Maher Ararthe Canadian citizen
whom US authorities, acting on intelligence supplied
by the RCMP, rendered to Syria, where he was brutally tortured.
But this acceptance was a subterfuge. Zaccardelli denied that
the intelligenceactually a series of amalgams and falsehoodsthe
RCMP supplied to US authorities was at the root of Arars
ordeal. He announced that no one in the force would be disciplined
for any of the injustices done to Arar, including the smear campaign
that the RCMP and the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS)
mounted against Arar through leaks to the press long
after Canadian and Syrian government officials had concluded there
was no basis whatsoever to the claims he was part of a terrorist
network. Confronted with evidence that the RCMP had tried to prevent
Arars release and lied to the government about its role
in the Arar affair, Zaccardelli bobbed and weaved so as to minimize,
if not outright disclaim, RCMP culpability.
Zaccardelli began his statement by tendering an apology to
Maher Arar and his family for whatever part the actions
of the RCMP may have contributed to the terrible injustices you
experienced.
This twisted formulation, which Zaccadrelli mouthed in an unrepentant
tone, reading from a prepared text and without raising his eyes,
set the tone for his entire testimony. Just as Zaccadrellis
apology with its use of the conditional may
and ambiguous whatever part suggested that the RCMP
hadnt in fact wronged and victimized Arar, so his acceptance
of the recommendations made by inquiry head Justice
OConnor was but a ploy to dismiss and avoid their essential
content.
The RCMP chief downplayed the role that Canadas national
police had played in the decision of US authorities to detain
Maher Arar in Septermber 2002 while he changed planes in New York
en route to Montreal, and then to deport him Syria where he was
detained and tortured for a year.
Conceding that his agency transmitted to US authorities information
falsely accusing Arar of terrorist links, Zaccardelli maintained
that Judge OConnor, in his report, had said that the RCMP
was not implicated in Arars illegal deportation.
In fact, OConnor wrote: In this report, I have
concluded that information supplied by the RCMP very likely played
a role in the American decisions to detain and remove Mr. Arar
to Syria. In that sense, those actions did cause or contribute
to Mr. Arars fate.
The RCMP chief followed his testimony with an extraordinary
admission: he had been personally convinced of Arars innocence
since the very first days of his detention in New York, even before
he was dispatched to a Syrian jail.
Zaccardelli insisted that his agency had immediately advised
its American counterparts that the information sent by the RCMP
was false. But the report of the commission of inquiry gives another
version of events: the RCMP had only indicated to their US counterparts
that it was not possible to establish a link between Arar and
al Qaeda. It did not go further and correct the inaccurate
information already provided to the American agencies about Mr.
Arar, including the label of Islamic extremist.
More serious, in any case, is the fact that the head of the
RCMP, knowing that Maher Arar was innocent, subsequently did everything
to keep him in the hands of his Syrian torturers, intimating to
the population and to his own government that Arar was associated
with terrorist activities, allowing leaks to this effect to appear
in the mass media and forwarding to Syrian authorities questions
for their interrogators to ask Arar..
You let him rot in prison for one year! accused
Serge Ménard, a Bloc Québécois Member of
Parliament. Why werent the facts corrected in public?
demanded Liberal MP Irwin Cotler. Incapable of giving a proper
response, Zaccardelli contented himself with saying that mistakes
had been made and that a better job could have been done.
In fact, Judge OConnor revealed in his report that in
November of 2003, after Arars return to Canada, the RCMP
continued to hide crucial information from the federal government.
The federal police did not say that they had transmitted a look-out
order to the United States concerning Arar and his spouse, nor
that the couple had been characterized as Islamic extremists.
Challenged to explain this omission, the RCMP chief invoked the
lack of time and the complexity of the file.
Only a few weeks before, both the RCMP and the Canadian Security
Intelligence Service (CSIS) had refused to put their signatures
on a letter from the minister of Foreign Affairs to the Syrian
authorities seeking Arars release.
None of these deeply troubling facts prevented the RCMP chief
from affirming in a defiant tone, throughout his testimony, that
his agency had acted in good faith and that he had no intention
of resigning.
Zaccardelli also indicated that no RCMP agent involved with
the Arar affair had been or will be sanctioned. In fact media
sources have reported that various individuals involved in the
victimization of Arar have been promoted. This was the case with
Mike Cabana, who was responsible for the project A-O Canada (the
group charged with the surveillance of Arar) and who, since then,
has been named the lead officer for national security operations
in Québec. Two other agents centrally involved in the Arar
affair, Richard Proulx and Garry Loeppky, have received the Order
of Merit of the Police Forces from the Governor General of Canada.
Appearing before the same parliamentary committee later the
same day, Minister of Public Safety Stockwell Day reiterated the
full support of the Conservative government for the work of the
federal police under Zaccardellis direction. In so doing,
he mentioned the governments plan to hire a thousand new
RCMP personnel, thus giving support to Zaccardellis claims
that that targeting of Arar was the product of a lack of police
resourcesnot excessive police powers and a war on
terrorism that the ruling class in the US and Canada have
manufactured as a smokescreen for pursuing their predatory global
ambitions and strengthening the repressive powers of the state.
Day refused to tender an official apology to Arar and his family
on behalf of the government of Canada, using negotiations underway
about possible compensation as a pretext.
While Day, echoing Zaccardelli, affirmed that the Conservative
government will follow all the recommendations of Justice OConnors
report, he refused to specify whether that would include lodging
official diplomatic complaints with the United States and Syria
for the treatment meted out to Arar. That question, he said, should
be referred to Foreign Affairs Minister Peter MacKay.
Subsequently, Mackay revealed that no official complaint has
been made to Washington, but that a complaint will
be made at some point. In his next breath Mackay voiced full confidence
in US authorities, no matter that they continue to deny that they
did anything wrong in delivering Arar to be tortured and that
the US Congress, at the behest of the Bush administration, has
just passed legislation legalizing the use of torture and indefinite
detentions against anyone designated by the US president as an
enemy combatant.
Said Mackay: I think [US authorities] ... have the same
objectives and the same concerns. They want to prevent this from
happening just as they would if an American citizen found themselves
in a similar situation.
Like Zaccardelli, the Conservative government is seeking to
downplay the complicity of the national-security establishment
in the seizure and torture of an innocent man and to cover up
the RCMPs subsequent victimization of Arar, and its readiness,
in lying to the government, to flout key democratic principles
regarding civilian government oversight of the police and military
apparatus. Nor does it intend to make a serious protest over the
US authorities deportation of a Canadian citizen to a third
country for torture, in defiance of international law. This is
a clear signal that, in the pursuit of their program of militarism
and social reaction, the Harper government and Canadas corporate
elite, which is strongly supportive of the current Conservative
regime, will not hesitate to ride roughshod over the most elementary
democratic rights.
See Also:
US Congress legalizes torture
and indefinite detention
[29 September 2006]
Bush administration denies
responsibility for torture of Canadian
[22 September 2006]
Canadas Liberal
government calls public inquiry into treatment of Maher Arar
[4 February 2004]
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