Thursday, December 18, 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

Boys, 16 And 17, Sought By Police In Manitoba Addiction Centre Attack

Police say the attackers were armed when the employees suffered serious injuries in the alleged Sunday evening assault at the Behavioural Health Foundation in the Rural Municipality of St Andrews.

Boys, 16 And 17, Sought By Police In Manitoba Addiction Centre Attack

7 Injured In Structure Collapse Of Framework At Muskrat Falls

7 Injured In Structure Collapse Of Framework At Muskrat Falls
MUSKRAT FALLS, N.L. — Seven workers were injured in the collapse of a structure used in the pouring of concrete at a building at the Muskrat Falls hydroelectric project in Labrador, the contractor said Monday.

7 Injured In Structure Collapse Of Framework At Muskrat Falls

Fort Mcmurray Pit Bull Avoids Ontario Ban With Layover At Toronto Airport

Fort Mcmurray Pit Bull Avoids Ontario Ban With Layover At Toronto Airport
The dog and her family from Fort McMurray, Alta., were stuck in Manitoba last week while trying to drive across the country to their home province of Prince Edward Island.

Fort Mcmurray Pit Bull Avoids Ontario Ban With Layover At Toronto Airport

Statistics Canada Says 69 Per Cent Were Dual-Income Households In 2015

Statistics Canada Says 69 Per Cent Were Dual-Income Households In 2015
The report says the proportion of dual-income families was 69 per cent in 2015 compared with just 36 per cent in 1976.

Statistics Canada Says 69 Per Cent Were Dual-Income Households In 2015

300 Firefighters From South Africa Arrive To Fight Flames In Northern Alberta

300 Firefighters From South Africa Arrive To Fight Flames In Northern Alberta
Kim Connors of the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre says the mobilization represents the largest group of wildland firefighters ever brought into Canada.

300 Firefighters From South Africa Arrive To Fight Flames In Northern Alberta

Schools Look To Address Mental Health Effect Of Student Debt

Schools Look To Address Mental Health Effect Of Student Debt
While schools attempt to lessen the load by offering financial aid, average student debt appears to be climbing. So some institutions are also responding by beefing up their mental health services to help students cope with life in the red

Schools Look To Address Mental Health Effect Of Student Debt