Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Trudeau Called Upon To Go Where Harper Wouldn't On Afghan Detainee Investigation

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jun, 2016 11:55 AM
  • Trudeau Called Upon To Go Where Harper Wouldn't On Afghan Detainee Investigation
OTTAWA — A coalition of human rights advocates and current and former parliamentarians and diplomats is calling on the Liberals to launch a public inquiry into the handling of Afghan detainees.
 
The group is releasing an open letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau saying it’s time for him to do what the previous government wouldn’t — hold a full and open investigation into the policies and practices around Canada’s transfer of captured Afghans to local authorities during the war in Kandahar.
 
Allegations those detainees were abused, in violation of international law, first surfaced publicly in 2007.
 
To what extent the Canadian military and government were aware of and ignored that fact, and what actually happened to the Afghans, was the subject of nearly five years of investigation by the military and Parliament.
 
But the Conservative government at the time refused to release much of the information those groups asked for to conduct their reviews.
 
And the coalition says without a proper public airing, future incidents can’t be prevented.
 
“This is unfinished business of the most serious kind: accountability for alleged serious violations of Canadian and international laws prohibiting perpetration of, and complicity in, the crime of torture,” the group writes in the letter.
 
Signatories to the letter include former prime minister Joe Clark, former ambassadors, the former chair of the Security Intelligence Review committee and former diplomats from Afghanistan, among others.
 
“As a result of the previous government’s stonewalling, there were no lessons learned, and no accountability,” the group writes in the letter, being released today.
 
“In a future military deployment, the same practices could reoccur.”

MORE National ARTICLES

Justin Trudeau Looking Into U.S. War-Dodger Issue But Gives No Commitments

Justin Trudeau Looking Into U.S. War-Dodger Issue But Gives No Commitments
TORONTO — The Liberal government is reviewing Canada's stance on American war dodgers who have sought refuge in this country rather than fight in Iraq, Prime Minister Trudeau said Friday.

Justin Trudeau Looking Into U.S. War-Dodger Issue But Gives No Commitments

Canadians Donate $30 Million To Red Cross For Fort McMurray Relief Effort

Canadians Donate $30 Million To Red Cross For Fort McMurray Relief Effort
  Canadian Red Cross President Conrad Sauve says that just on Thursday, more than 100,000 people texted his organization to donate.

Canadians Donate $30 Million To Red Cross For Fort McMurray Relief Effort

Syrian Refugees Resettled In Fort McMurray Forced To Flee From 'Fire To Fire'

Syrian Refugees Resettled In Fort McMurray Forced To Flee From 'Fire To Fire'
They are among about six families of Syrian refugees that resettled in the city in recent months.

Syrian Refugees Resettled In Fort McMurray Forced To Flee From 'Fire To Fire'

Burnaby Woman Fined $5,200 For Illegally Buying Bear Gallbladders

Burnaby Woman Fined $5,200 For Illegally Buying Bear Gallbladders
VANCOUVER — A Burnaby, B.C., woman has been fined $5,200 after illegally buying bear gallbladders in an attempt to treat her severely-ill son's seizures.

Burnaby Woman Fined $5,200 For Illegally Buying Bear Gallbladders

Prince George RCMP Seek Suspect Responsible For Huge 2015 Wildfire

The Bobtail Lake blaze was first spotted on May 8, 2015.

Prince George RCMP Seek Suspect Responsible For Huge 2015 Wildfire

Police Arrest Man Suspected Of Stealing Five Million Bees From Quebec Beekeeper

Police Arrest Man Suspected Of Stealing Five Million Bees From Quebec Beekeeper
VICTORIAVILLE, Que. — A 36-year-old man has been arrested in the theft of five million bees in Quebec.

Police Arrest Man Suspected Of Stealing Five Million Bees From Quebec Beekeeper