[R-G] B.C. detention was bid to silence anti-war activists, American says
Anthony Fenton
fentona at shaw.ca
Sun Sep 16 22:14:00 MDT 2007
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columbia/story/2007/09/16/bc-
arrest.html
B.C. detention was bid to silence anti-war activists, American says
Last Updated: Sunday, September 16, 2007 | 4:10 PM ET
CBC News
An American peace activist, who was detained by immigration officials
in B.C. for two days, is accusing Ottawa of engineering her
confinement to silence critics of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Alison Bodine, 22, of Broomfield, Colo., was carrying anti-war
pamphlets in her car when she was arrested Thursday at the Peace Arch
border crossing in Surrey, B.C., which is the main crossing between
Vancouver and Seattle.
Bodine, who studied physics at the University of British Columbia,
said she works with an anti-war group based in B.C. called
Mobilization Against War and Occupation.
When she approached the Peace Arch crossing, Bodine said Canadian
border officials told her there was a Canada-wide warrant for her
arrest.
She spent Thursday night in a jail in Surrey and then was transferred
to a holding cell at Vancouver International Airport before being
released Friday night. She told CBC News she still hasn't been told
what crime she is accused of committing.
"All I've been told is that I have an admissibility hearing coming up
on Monday at two p.m. at the immigration offices," Bodine said on
Saturday. "I do not get to hear my full case until that hearing."
Bodine said other activists should worry she was arrested.
"This was a bit of a test, to see what happens when they arrest
someone who isn't agreeing with their current foreign policy."
The Canada Border Services Agency said it could not comment on
specific cases.
Canada has about 2,500 soldiers deployed in Afghanistan as part of
the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF). Canada
started the mission in early 2002, in the wake of the U.S. invasion
that overthrew the Taliban government.
The United States has thousands of troops in Afghanistan and about
160,000 in Iraq.
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