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"NO SECURITY WITHOUT HUMAN RIGHTS," WARNS CUPW PRESIDENT
(The following
article is from the January 16-31, 2010 issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist
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Speech by Denis
Lemelin, President,
Canadian Union of Postal Workers, at an Ottawa public meeting to mark
International Human Rights Day on Dec. 10, 2009
Thank you for inviting me here. But I
want to say that I am the voice of all Canadian Union Postal Workers
(CUPW) members who did work around human rights for the last 45 years.
Our Union has always stood up to defend social justice and human
rights. It is part of our history.
Our members
know that we cannot
have security if people who live amongst us are subject to arbitrary
detention and arrest. They know that we cannot have security if people
who are arrested do not have the right to see the evidence against
them. They know that our security is not improved when people from
countries with large Islamic populations are targeted and are subjected
to Islamophobia.
For CUPW,
the denial of human
rights to any person leads to an environment where the human rights of
all people are in jeopardy.
This is why
we are standing in
solidarity today with Mohamed and Sophie Harkat and with other security
certificate detainees and their families.
At CUPW we
believe that the
basic principle of natural justice has to apply to everyone. Our Union
and the entire labour movement have struggled for some level of
fairness in the workplace. This means that when our members are
subjected to discipline, their Union advocate has the right to see the
information that the Employer has on them and their Union advocate has
the right to show this and share this with the member involved.
The labour
movement has fought
for this right for years. And now to have the government of Canada say
that it is legitimate to imprison people on the basis on unseen
allegations is dangerous.
But as
activists, we know that
we are living in a capitalist world and we know that the system has put
in place mechanisms to protect itself and the labour movement has a
long experience of it.
Now, I want
to share with you
the experience of CUPW. In a very small way CUPW knows what it is like
to be watched by the RCMP and their friends. We know that the RCMP and
the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) spied on CUPW and
CUPW activists for many years. The Vancouver Local of CUPW was under
constant surveillance by the RCMP from 1965-1984. In 1987, CSIS bugged
the telephone system at the CUPW National Office.
There is
documented evidence
that CSIS agent John Farrell looked into the banking records of union
activists, illegally broke into cars of CUPW activists in Toronto and
was authorized to intercept every piece of mail delivered to the homes
of targeted union leaders. While most mail wasn't necessarily opened,
photocopies were made of both sides of each piece. Information from
this was used to "mine contacts" at credit card agencies and banks. The
garbage of targeted CUPW leaders was routinely stolen and inspected.
CSIS even gave some of the targeted leaders special garbage bags on the
pretence that they were part of a special recycling experiment.
The RCMP and
CSIS viewed CUPW as
a National Security threat. It was wrong to say CUPW was a national
security threat and it is wrong to see Mohamed Harkat and the other
security certificate detainees as threats.
Twenty years
ago, the system did
it to protect itself internally and it continues to do so. Now it is
doing the same thing to protect itself from the outside, on an
international basis.
For CUPW
this security certificate regime represents several dangerous trends: I
will talk about three of them.
The first
one is about the
criminalization of dissent. If you do not hold or do not appear to hold
majority views, you and your ideas are criminalized. We are seeing this
locally, nationally, and internationally. About a year ago CUPW had
agreed to have the Justice for Mohamed Harkat committee use our
boardroom for a press conference. The day before the meeting, members
of the Canada Border Services Agency visited our office. They were
wearing bullet proof vests, and were armed. The message they were
sending was that if you were a supporter of Mohamed Harkat, they were
going to intimidate you.
The second
one is about
Islamophobia. The men who are or who have been held under these
security certificates have all practised the Muslim Faith. The
Runnymede Trust in Britain defined Islamophobia as "unfounded hostility
towards Islam." It refers also to the practical consequences of such
hostility in unfair discrimination against Muslim individuals and
communities, and to the exclusion of Muslims from mainstream political
and social affairs. This practice builds inequality and discrimination,
at a time when unity is needed.
The third
one is about denial of
human and civil rights. CUPW believes that the arrest of Mohamed
Harkat, the torture of Maher Arar, the institution of the no-fly lists
etc. serve to weaken our collective security. For CUPW the issue is
clear. Our security does not lie with measures that strip away our
democratic and human rights. Our security is about solidarity and
justice.
The arrest
and jailing of
Mohamed Harkat and the other security certificate detainees has not
resulted in CUPW members feeling more secure.
Here are
some items that would
make CUPW members more secure: an end to the security certificate
regime; the unconditional freedom of Mohamed Harkat and all the other
security certificate detainees; a strong emphasis on protecting human
and civil rights, locally, nationally and globally; the complete
withdrawal of Canadian troops from Afghanistan. If the Federal
Government was serious about a war on terror those would be some of the
key elements.
Looking
toward future challenges, we have to fight for a different society:
* a foreign policy that puts justice,
and dignity and fair trade above that of free trade. An example of the
latter is the Free Trade Agreement between Canada and Colombia.
* an emphasis on a strong public
sector, including universal services, both here and internationally.
* a focus on job creation, not
corporate greed. We have to link the fight for security and human
rights with the building of a new society.
This
so-called "war on terror"
which is really a war on Human Rights has reminded me about courage. It
takes courage to withstand being arrested and jailed without charges
and without knowing the allegations against you. It takes courage to
stand up and say the security certificate regime is unjust and
undemocratic. And, it takes courage to live every day under the harsh
and invasive eyes of CSIS and Canada Border Services.
So on behalf
the 54,000 members
of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers I want to thank Sophie and
Mohamed Harkat for their courage.
We know that
today, or next week
or next year any of us here - trade unionists, human rights defenders,
peace activists just to name a few - could all be threatened when human
rights and natural justice are on the chopping block. Our own
experiences with CSIS and the RCMP keeping CUPW and its activists under
surveillance have led CUPW to recognize the need for solidarity with
Mohamed Harkat and all those who become victims of secret security
campaigns. We know that the best way to be part of the struggle against
the secret information society is to make a new world possible.