[R-G] Canada should bar or prosecute Bush: lawyer
Anthony Fenton
fentona at shaw.ca
Thu Mar 5 09:22:14 MST 2009
http://www.ffwdweekly.com/article/news-views/news/canada-should-bar-or-prosecute-bush-lawyer-3378/
Canada should bar or prosecute Bush: lawyer
Foreign Affairs stays silent on upcoming Calgary visit
Published March 5, 2009 by Jeremy Klaszus in News
Mark Mushet
Vancouver lawyer Gail Davidson says that because Bush has been
'credibly accused' of war crimes, Canada should deny him entry
As George W. Bush’s St. Patrick’s Day visit to Calgary draws near, the
federal government is facing pressure from activists and human rights
lawyers to bar the former U.S. president from the country or prosecute
him for war crimes and crimes against humanity once he steps on
Canadian soil.
Bush is scheduled to speak at the Telus Convention Centre March 17,
but Vancouver lawyer Gail Davidson says that because Bush has been
“credibly accused” of supporting torture in Iraq and Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba, Canada has a legal obligation to deny him entry under Canada’s
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. The law says foreign nationals
who have committed war crimes or crimes against humanity, including
torture, are “inadmissible” to Canada.
”The test isn’t whether the person’s been convicted, but whether
there’s reasonable grounds to think that they have been involved,”
says Davidson, who’s with Lawyers Against the War (LAW). “…It’s now a
matter of public record that Bush was in charge of setting up a regime
of torture that spanned several parts of the globe and resulted in
horrendous injuries and even death. Canada has a duty.”
In February, Davidson sent a letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper
and other cabinet ministers asking the Canadian government to either
bar Bush from Canada, prosecute him once he arrives, or have the
federal attorney general consent to a private prosecution by LAW
against the Texan. She hasn’t received a response, and concedes she’s
fighting “an uphill battle” with “terrific challenges.” Davidson laid
torture charges against Bush during his visit to Vancouver in 2004,
but a judge quashed them within days.
The federal government is keeping silent on the upcoming visit. “We
have no comments to offer on the visit of Mr. George W. Bush to
Calgary,” said Foreign Affairs spokesperson Alain Cacchione in an e-
mail to Fast Forward. When told about Davidson’s letter, a
spokesperson with the Canadian Border Services Agency said “we
wouldn’t comment on something like that.”
Davidson is one of many voices around the world calling for Bush’s
prosecution. Earlier this year, Manfred Nowak, the UN’s Special
Rapporteur on Torture, said the U.S. has a “clear obligation” to
prosecute Bush and former secretary of defence Donald Rumsfeld for
authorizing torture — a violation of the UN Convention on Torture.
“Obviously the highest authorities in the United States were aware of
this,” Nowak told a German TV station in January.
Joanne Mariner, terrorism and counterterrorism director for Human
Rights Watch, says that while there’s legally “all the reason in the
world” to prosecute decision-makers in the Bush administration, “it’s
a different story” politically. “The Obama administration certainly
has not given much in the way of encouraging signals for such a
prosecution,” says Mariner, who’s based in New York. “Obama has
consistently said that he wants to look forward.” Mariner says that
while a U.S. justice department investigation is unlikely, a
congressional investigation is more probable — and “that could lead to
recommendations for prosecution.”
Mariner’s not expecting a Canadian prosecution against Bush.
“Obviously the Canadian government would have to be in favour of it,
and that seems rather unlikely,” she says.
Calgary activists, meanwhile, are organizing a number of events for
the week of Bush’s visit, culminating in a noontime rally outside the
Telus Convention Centre during Bush’s speech. “We want to give him the
welcome that he deserves — which is we want him to go back to the
States, or we want him arrested,” says organizer Collette Lemieux.
Activist Julie Hrdlicka, who visited Iraq twice during the American
occupation, agrees. “We need to send a clear message to him that he’s
not welcome,” she says.
Lemieux is hopeful that Bush will eventually be prosecuted. “Do I
think that it’s going to happen very soon? No,” she says. “But I think
that it’s very important that we keep the pressure up…. We have to
make it clear that there’s accountability.”
The Plaza Theatre, meanwhile, is screening three Bush-themed
documentaries for a “Bush Bash Film Fest” the night of the visit. Half
the box office proceeds will go to the United Way.
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