Thursday, February 08, 2007

HUNGERSTRIKES AT CANADA'S "GUANTANAMO NORTH" UPDATE AND NEW CALL

Thanks to all of you who responded to this urgent appeal (below) about the
hungerstrikes at Canada's "Guantanamo North" prison.

The Canadian government is continuing its closed door policy &
misinformation campaign (see our six-point response to our Public Safety
Minister's lies at www.homesnotbombs.ca/daylies.htm). In the absence of
response from the government, the men have expressed their intention to
continue the hungerstrike. Today is day 76 of the hungerstrike for Mohammad
Mahjoub, day 65 for Hassan Almrei and Mahmoud Jaballah. The prison is
refusing to provide or permit daily medical monitoring - normally
recommended after 10 days of hungerstrike - thus the situation could become
critical at any moment.

We are therefore RENEWING OUR APPEAL to allies and friends internationally
to PLEASE DO ALL YOU can to put pressure on Canada's appalling and racist
treatment of Jaballah, Mahjoub and Almrei. This is not only about the lives
and dignity of these men and their families; in Canada, the struggle of
these migrants for dignity and justice has become a symbol of the struggle
against Canada's support for a racist system of global apartheid in the name
of "the war against terrorism" and "national security".

SPECIFICALLY, please send or deliver letters in a delegation to Canadian
embassies or consulates near you; call in to a Canadian embassy or
consulate in your region; organise a picket outside a Canadian
embassy or consulate; or seek press coverage of the situation in your local
media.

FOR MORE INFORMATION or to INFORM US OF AN ACTION: tasc@web.ca or 416 651
5800, abolissons@gmail.com or 514 222 0205.

BACKGROUND & UPDATES: www.homesnotbombs.ca/gitmonorthstrike.htm.
ALSO: www.peoplescommission.ath.cx, www.adilinfo.org,
htttp://zerra.net/freemohamed/news.php


==============

CALL FOR EMERGENCY ACTIONS at CANADIAN EMBASSIES
on WEDNESDAY, 7 February 2007

DAY 75 of HUNGER-STRIKES at CANADA'S "GUANTANAMO BAY" PRISON

"[They have a] refrigerator stocked with a variety of juices, soy milk,
honey and chocolate sauce." -- Canadian "Public Safety" Minister Stockwell
Day, asked on 2 February about the hunger-strike at Canada's Guantanamo Bay

Canada's Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Minister seems to think
that human rights violations are okay as long as prisoners have access to
chocolate sauce. Canada has its own mini-version of Guantanamo bay, a new
six-cell prison that was opened in April 2006 specifically for immigrants
and refugees who are detained without charge or trial, under secret
evidence, indefinitely, under threat of deportation, to places where it has
been recognized that they are at risk of torture.

The three detainees - Mahmoud Jaballah, detained since August 2001, Hassan
Almrei, detained since October 2001, and Mahmoud Jaballah, detained since
June 2000 - have been held under Canada's draconian "security certificate"
process (see background below), on vague allegations that they may have
something to do with that increasingly meaningless but all-powerful label
"terrorism". They have never ceased to insist on their innocence and demand
a fair and open trial, which is no more than the legal right of every person
in Canada.

All three are currently on hungerstrike, demanding minor improvements to
their conditions of detention, amounting to being treated with some degree
of dignity. Their demands include access to an independent ombudsman to
receive complaints (something which exists at other prisons in Canada). The
Canadian government's response has been consistent with the way the
detainees and their families have been treated from the very beginning of
their ordeal: stony silence, callous denial, misinformation and outright
lies. The spirit is captured by the Minister of Public Safety's response to
a public appeal by family members - on day 70 of a potentially deadly
hungerstrike - that the prisoners have access to chocolate sauce in the
detention centre.

As of Wednesday, it will be day 75 for Mahjoub, and day 64 for Almrei and
Jaballah of a juice and water only hungerstrike. Because the men are even
being denied the daily medical monitoring that is standard in a hungerstrike
(see letter from almost 70 health professionals calling for medical
monitoring at www.homesnotbombs.ca/health.htm), the situation could become
life-threatening at any time.

==> WE ARE ASKING PEOPLE IN ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD TO ORGANIZE EMERGENCY
ACTIONS AT THE CANADIAN EMBASSY OR CONSULATE NEAREST YOU ON WEDNESDAY, 7
FEBRUARY. We believe that international pressure - particularly media
attention - could have a significant impact.

Actions could take the form of delegations to present letters to Canadian
officials, pickets, or theatrical media actions (orange jumpsuits and
chocolate sauce: chocolate sauce in Guantanmo! or Let Them Eat Chocolate
Sauce!) at Canadian consulates or embassies.

Actions should highlight the following demands:
1) Act immediately to find a solution to the hungerstrike before the men
die.
2) Release the five people who are currently subject to "security
certificates", or charge them and provide them a fair and open trial.
3) Close the new Kingston Immigration Holding Centre ("Guantanamo North"),
Abolish security certificates, and End deportations to torture.

==> PLEASE LET US KNOW at abolissons@gmail.com and tasc@web.ca or tel. + 1
514 222 0205 if you can carry out an action. We can supply background
material, model letters, and updates. It is very important that we receive
copies of any letters you write, reports on your actions, and media
coverage.


BACKGROUND INFORMATION

* For more updates on the hungerstrike:
www.homesnotbombs.ca/gitmonorthstrike.htm

* Open letter from the hungerstrikers:
www.homesnotbombs.ca/openletter.htm

* Links to reports by Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, UN
Committee against Torture, UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, UN Human
Right Committee on Canadian security certificates:
www.adilinfo.org/dossier.htm.

The context of the hungerstrikes that have been repeatedly waged by the
detainees at Canada's "Guantanamo North" prison (the Kingston Immigration
Holding Centre) is the security certificate process under which these
prisoners are being held. The reason they are on hungerstrike, the reason
they will be on hungerstrike again in a few months - if they survive this
round - is that they are in indefinite, arbitrary detention under a threat
of deportation to torture. What makes the daily prison abuse to which they
are subject intolerable is that they are locked up for no reason at all,
that the imprisonment is indefinite, that they are threatened with torture,
and that they are rendered powerless to challenge the injustices and to
clear their names.

The security certificate process is set in motion when the Federal Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration and the Solicitor-General of Canada (that is,
the Minister of Public Safety), on the request of the Canadian Security
Intelligence Service (CSIS), sign a certificate. In the case of refugees,
this automatically means detention without bail until the certificate
undergoes a judicial review; a process which can take years. In the case of
Permanent Residents, there are detention reviews every six months.

The certificate is reviewed by a Federal Court judge in a process that has
been very widely criticised for failing to meet international standards of a
fair trial: by Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch (Still at Risk:
Diplomatic Assurances no Safeguard against Torture, April 2005), the
Canadian Bar Association, the United Nations Human Rights Committee (2
November 2005, CCPR/C/CAN/CO/5), the United Nations Committee against
Torture (May 2005, CAT/C/CO/34/CAN), the UN Working Group on Arbitrary
Detention (5 December 2005, E/CN.4/2006/7/Add.2), Members of Parliament, as
well as a wide range of other organizations and individuals across the
country.

Briefly:
- the process applies ONLY to those without full citizenship in Canada and
so is discriminatory from the outset;
- information against the individual is secret - that is, it is not
disclosed either to the detainee nor their lawyer;
- closed hearings between the judge and the Ministers, without the
participation of the individual or their lawyer, can be held at any time;
- the presiding judge is restricted to assessing whether the allegations are
"reasonable", rather than "beyond all reasonable doubt";
- key terms (such as "national security", "terrorism" and "membership") are
simply undefined;
- hearsay (i.e. gossip) and other dubious information (newspaper articles,
information from foreign spy agencies) is accepted; and
- if the judge upholds the certificate, there is no appeal.

The certificate then becomes a deportation order. Though Canada's position -
completely contrary to international law - is that it has the right to
deport people on security grounds even if they face torture, the fact that
all current detainees face a substantial risk of torture has delayed their
deportation. In practice, this has translated to indefinite detention under
a continued threat of deportation to torture.

Security certificates are just the tip of the iceberg in terms of abuse
Canada metes out to migrants in the name of "national security". Refugees
can be subjected to similar treatment under other parts of Canada's
immigration law. Bachan Singh Sogi, for example, was deported on 1 July
2006, after spending almost four years in prison without charge under secret
evidence. The deportation was carried out on the grounds of national
security, but not under a security certificate. It went ahead despite a
positive assessment of "risk of torture" and "risk to life or risk of cruel
and unusual treatment or punishment" by Canada's own immigration officials
itself.

A constitutional challenge to the security certificate was heard by the
Supreme Court of Canada in June 2006. A decision is pending. A parliamentary
committee is also apparently in the process of reviewing the legislation.
But that has made no difference for the people currently deprived of their
liberty under a security certificate, nor for their families.

* Out under conditions:
- Mohamed Harkat, married, born in Algeria, was accepted as a convention
refugee in Canada before being arrested in December 2002. He was released
on bail under virtual house arrest in June 2006.
- Adil Charkaoui, married with three children, was born in Morocco and came
to Canada as a permanent resident with his mother, father and sister in
1995; he was arrested in May 2003 and released under harsh conditions in
February 2005.

* Detained in "Guantanamo North", the new detention facility for security
certificate detainees near Kingston, Ontario:
- Mohammad Mahjoub, married with two children, is a torture survivor from
Egypt who was accepted as a convention refugee in Canada in 1996. He was
arrested in June 2000 in Toronto. He was denied bail in November 2003 and
again in November 2005. He is waiting for a third decision on bail.
- Mahmoud Jaballah, married with six children, is a torture survivor from
Egypt and a school principal who arrived in Canada in 1996. He was arrested
under his second certificate in August 2001, days before his refugee
hearing. He is now waiting for a decision on his application for release on
bail.
- Hassan Almrei, born in Syria and accepted as convention refugee in June
2000, was arrested under a certificate in October 2001. He has been refused
bail twice.


Hungerstrike Support Committee (Montreal)
abolissons@gmail.com
tel. + 1 514 859 9023

Campaign to Stop Secret Trials in Canada (Toronto)
tasc@web.ca
tel. + 1 416 651 5800

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