11) END TORTURE, END THE WAR
(The following
article is from the January 1-15, 2010 issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist
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A number of Canadian Peace Alliance
affiliates have held various actions to condemn the US/NATO escalation
of the war in Afghanistan, and recent confirmation of Canada's role in
turning over detainees who were tortured by the Karzai regime's police
and military units. The CPA has issued the following statement:
The
testimony of Richard Colvin
shows that the highest levels of the Conservative Government are
complicit in war crimes. As many as 600 detainees, many of whom were
just innocent bystanders, were handed over to Afghan law enforcement
agencies by the Canadian forces. Torture by the Afghan police forces is
known to be widespread.
Stephen
Harper and Peter MacKay
are challenging the credibility of Colvin, saying that he is listening
to "Taliban propaganda" Yet it is the Harper government that totally
lacks credibility on this issue. It is hard to believe that they didn't
see multiple memos and reports from one of the top diplomats in
Afghanistan. It would represent a radical departure from standard
procedure for any government.
And even if
the memos didn't
circulate to the political masters in the Conservative party, there
were countless reports from international agencies such as the Red
Cross, Amnesty International, School of Law of New York University,
Center for Human Rights and Human Rights Watch which all said that
torture of detainees was widespread. The Tories must have known this
information or they showed a woeful lack of knowledge about their main
foreign policy plank.
Once the
issue of detainee
torture hit the media in early 2007, the Harper Government worked to
both discredit the reports and to allay fears with a new detainee
transfer agreement. That agreement has not stopped the torture of
innocent Afghan civilians.
The Afghan
Independent Human
Rights Commission released a report in April 2009 that interviewed
people who had been detained by Afghan police and army. The results
were staggering. According to their findings, 98.5% of detainees said
that they were tortured. They have concluded that torture "is a
commonplace practice in Afghanistan's law enforcement institutions,"
and add that "torture is also perpetrated by the parties to the armed
conflict in Afghanistan, including the international security forces."
According to
Afghan MP Malalai
Joya, "It is an open secret that this happens. The Canadian government
is still supporting this."
An inquiry
into the torture of
detainees is long overdue but given the obstructionist nature of the
Conservatives, we are unlikely to get a full accounting of these
scandalous revelations. Peter MacKay, who earlier this year called for
a Parliamentary discussion on the future role of Canada in Afghanistan,
has decided to cancel that debate, likely because he fears any scrutiny
on the torture issue. Complicity in war crimes is too serious an issue
to be swept under the carpet. There must be a parliamentary debate on
ending Canada's complicity in the crime of the Afghan war.
Torture is
part and parcel of
this occupation and the so-called "war on terror." Right now, the U.S.
is expanded the prison at Bagram Airbase in what Afghans are calling a
'new Guantanamo.' Only by ending this occupation can we ensure an end
to Canadian complicity in torture. We need to bring the troops home
immediately.