[R-G] No Refuge from Iraq in Canada

Anthony Fenton fentona at shaw.ca
Mon Aug 18 13:25:21 MDT 2008


Features > August 18, 2008
No Refuge from Iraq in Canada
By Peter Kavanagh
http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/3853/no_refuge_from_iraq_in_canada/

Conscientious objectors from the U.S. military who are seeking refuge  
in Canada are rightly confused about the rules when it comes to being  
able to stay. The stories of Pfc. Robin Long and Pfc. Joshua Key won’t  
clarify much but they do provide some clues.

Long and Key have much in common. Both joined the U.S. Army looking to  
better their lives; both deserted their posts and fled to Canada; both  
sought refugee status.

But Long, currently in custody at Fort Carlson military base in  
Colorado, is the first U.S. conscientious objector to be sent back  
from Canada, while Key sits at home in Saskatchewan, awaiting a new  
hearing on his claim for refugee status.

“It didn’t sit right in my stomach,” Long told the Boise Weekly in May  
2006, about going to Iraq. “I morally couldn’t do it.”

Long, 25, fled to Canada in June 2005 after being ordered to Iraq  
earlier that year. He told the media and Canada’s Federal Court that  
despite joining the Army at age 19 and planning on a career in the  
military, he decided, based on conversations with soldiers returning  
from Iraq, that “when these people came back and were telling these  
horrific stories and our superiors were egging people on, some people  
were actually volunteering to go over there and it just seemed like  
justified homicide. It didn’t seem right to me.”

Long argued that if Canada returned him to the United States, he would  
be subjected to cruel and unusual punishment and be denied justice.

On July 17 — after hearings before a Refugee Determination Board and  
an unsuccessful appeal to the Federal Court in Vancouver — Canadian  
officials deported Long, handing him over to U.S. authorities in  
Washington state.

Key, 30, fled to Canada in March 2005 while on a two-week leave from a  
tour of duty in Iraq. He says he joined the military in 2002 in order  
to make a living and support his wife and children. In his  
autobiography, A Deserter’s Tale, Key recounts that his recruiter  
promised him he wouldn’t be sent to Iraq when he enlisted.

When he applied for refugee status, Key told the refugee board —  
according to transcripts used in the Federal Court appeal — that his  
role in Iraq was “to blow open the doors with explosives and then to  
assist in both securing the premises and detaining the adult male  
occupants.”

Key also alleged during his hearing that “during these searches, he  
witnessed several instances of unjustified abuse, unwarranted  
detention, humiliation and looting by fellow soldiers, much of which  
he said was ignored by his superior officers.”

Key argued that to be sent back to Iraq would mean being forced to  
commit war crimes. The refugee board rejected that assertion and  
denied his claim. But Canada’s Federal Court ruled that while Key  
couldn’t prove he was being ordered to commit war crimes, he could  
make a legitimate argument that he was being forced to violate the  
Geneva Conventions, and that alone could qualify him for refugee status.

Some observers in Canada, including Key’s lawyer, Jeffry House — who  
himself fled to Canada in the ’60s to escape the Vietnam War — explain  
that a conscientious objector who has been in Iraq has a stronger case  
than one who leaves before serving in the war. In other words, being  
forced to participate in an unjust war is different from fearing that  
the U.S. justice system is flawed.

Says House: “The Key decision is of use to soldiers who have their  
boots on the ground and are ordered to commit acts [that] violate  
their consciences, and also violate international norms.”

Canadian pollster Angus Reid recently found that 64 percent of  
Canadians want military deserters to be allowed to remain in Canada.  
In June, the Canadian Parliament passed a non-binding motion urging  
the government to follow the precedent set during the Vietnam War,  
when Canada allowed 50,000 draft resisters and conscientious objectors  
to settle there.

But the Conservative government, led by Prime Minister Stephen Harper,  
has rejected the parliamentary motion and ignored the poll numbers,  
arguing against a parallel between the Vietnam War and the Iraq War  
because soldiers today are volunteers.

“People do not join with their eyes closed,” Laurie Hawn, a  
Conservative member of Parliament and a former lieutenant colonel in  
the Canadian Air Force, said at a June 3 House of Commons debate. “If  
they do, then they have their own problems.”

Roughly 200 U.S. war resisters in Canada are awaiting word on their  
applications for refugee status, and possibly twice as many are in  
hiding in the country, according to the War Resisters Support Campaign  
(WRSC), a group of former U.S. deserters who stayed in Canada even  
after the Carter administration granted them amnesty.

The WRSC is mounting a campaign throughout Canada to clarify the  
confusion left by the court rulings.

In a July 14 statement, Bob Ages, chair of Vancouver’s WRSC, said: “We  
are calling on Canadians to take immediate action to tell the  
government that its attempts to overturn Canada’s longstanding  
tradition of sanctuary will be met with challenges everywhere.”
Peter Kavanagh is a journalist and radio producer with the Canadian  
Broadcasting Corporation in Toronto.


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