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Egalitarian-Internationalism and Canada's NDPDo not forget our sisters and brothers in Iran.On May Day this year in Iran, two brave women - Sousan Razani and Shiva Kheirabadi - participated in open celebrations of the international workers' holiday. The regime considers this to be a crime and the women were arrested. They have just been sentenced to 15 lashes apiece, as well as four months in prison. They're not alone. In a new and ferocious wave of repression directed against worker activists, a Kurdish teacher (Farzad Kamangar) has been sentenced to death. Three men (Abdullah Khani, Seyed Qaleb Hosseini, and Khaled Hosseini) have been sentenced to 120 lashes between them, as well as prison sentences. Afshin Shams has been arrested and awaits trial. Meanwhile, Mansour Osanloo, leader of the Tehran bus workers, has languished in jail since July 2007. Enough is enough. The Iranian regime must now receive a loud and clear message from the international labour movement that we have not forgotten our sisters and brothers in Iran. Thousands of us must raise our voices. You can help send that message by going to LabourStart's new campaign page here: http://www.labourstart.org/iran South Korean unions under attackThe South Korean government has issued arrest warrants for the entire leadership of the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) and several of its affiliates. Union leaders are holed up in the KCTU headquarters in Seoul, the building now surrounded by riot police.
From LabourStart: http://www.labourstart.org/kctu LabourStart has been asked by the KCTU to organize a big international campaign to send messages of protest, demanding an end to the arrests and respect for human rights. Please make sure you send off your protest message today from http://www.labourstart.org/kctu and spread the word to your friends and fellow trade unionists. There is also a Facebook Cause promoting the same issue -- please sign up to that and add it to your profile. Details here: http://apps.facebook.com/causes/107071 Let's go viral with this one, and get 10,000 messages sent to South Korea this week! B.C. group fights disinformation on Afghan mission... a new countermovement has formed, one that lauds the Canadian Forces and its efforts in Afghanistan. Strange as it might seem, it's based here in Vancouver, where the political landscape tilts sharply to the left.
Founders of the Canada Afghanistan Solidarity Committee include poets, environmentalists and local authors who will never be mistaken for conservatives, such as Terry Glavin and Stan Persky. Among the many books Mr. Pesky has written is Boyopolis: Sex and Politics in Gay Eastern Europe; one can assume it is not on Rick Hillier's bedside table...
Appeal for Mohamed Kohail Execution SentencingWe endorse the Fair Court Hearing Appeal for Mohamed Kohail Execution Sentencing Petition to Canadian Government.
On March 3rd 2008 at 1pm local time in Saudi Arabia, the court sentenced a Canadian citizen, Mohamad Kohail to be executed by public beheading. This sentence was due to their link in Munzer Hiraki's death that took place January 2007, after having engaged in a school yard fight. Hiraki’s death was an accident due to his heart conditions, and not intentionally done.
The death penalty by beheading in Saudi Arabia is executed in public after Friday noon prayer by chopping off his head using a sword. The defendants did not have the right to have a legal representation in most of the trial sessions. It was mentioned in the news of family members concern about serious flaw in the legal procedure. During the hearing on March 3rd, the Kohail defense had brought two witnesses but the court did not take them into consideration. In fact, during the whole trial time none of the witnesses that were presented by the Kohail defense were considered. Out of three judges only two were present, and yet it was the clerk who announced the verdict and not the judges. In the end, we ask for the Canadian public to reach out and convince the Canadian government to interfere for a fair and justice trial. Kohail being a Canadian citizen should have the right to have the Canadian government to be by his side and make sure that this beheading of his innocence does not take place. We as citizens of Canada should do our utmost effort to help Mohamed get through this situation. Lets gather here so we can give him the support he deserves. The media is willing to get in contact with all those that Mohamed knew here and this will help his cause inshallah. Keep Mohamed in your daily prayers because he will need each one of them to have the Saudi court system to realize truth that is being hidden! Taslima Nasreen: "I have to escape from the death chamber"Taslima Nasreen is leaving India to rescue her life. She does not flee from the threat of the fundamentalists, but from the unbearable conditions in which she is held. For four months now, the Indian Government is keeping her in solitary confinement at an undisclosed location. She is not allowed to meet anybody including closest friends. And worse: she has been denied urgently needed medical treatment. As a result, her health is in alarming condition.
I have been in constant phone contact with Taslima Nasreen in her secret prison. The following shocking document, written by her some days ago and sent to me, has been kept under wraps according to her wishes till the eve of her departure. This morning she told me that I can release it.
Sanal Edamaruku
I HAVE TO ESCAPE FROM THE DEATH CHAMBER
I used to call this the torture chamber. I gradually came to realize that it was the chamber of death instead. I was not even allowed to stay in hospital for long though the doctors felt it was necessary in order to stabilize my blood pressure. But then, orders are orders and the government did not want to be inconvenienced by me in any way whatsoever. The government did not want the media to know I had been hospitalized. I did not have my mobile phone with me and the doctors at the government's hospital -AIIMS - were instructed to discharge me after a certain period of time. Curiously though, the decision was not left to the doctors as to what this certain period of time was to be. The last time I was admitted to this hospital a few weeks ago I was suddenly discharged as a result of governmental pressure. I am sure this was linked to a report in the Times of India which stated I had been hospitalized.
At this undisclosed location I am neither allowed to go to a doctor for consultation nor is one allowed to come to me. I suffer from severely fluctuating blood pressure and the strange thing is that I was not even allowed to speak to any of the doctors at the hospital over the telephone. Even after repeated requests I was not given a single phone number. When I was in hospital, I asked the doctors if I could call them if necessary but they said that they were not allowed to hand out their numbers. I had to make inquiries through officials to get even the simplest of answers from these doctors. I have suffered tremendously both physically and mentally. My blood pressure is now impossible to control. The doctors say it is due to stress which I must avoid at all costs. How can I not be stressed when everything is continuously stressing me out? I am brought to this place and incarcerated like some animal; my human rights constantly and continually violated. I am not allowed to step out or meet anyone. How can I not be stressed? I received the extension of my resident's permit, but the status quo continued.
And because of the high blood pressure caused by stress, I developed heart disease (hypertrophy) and hypertensive retinopathy, both of which were diagnosed at the hospital. The hypertensive retinopathy will eventually cause me to go blind. The blood pressure if uncontrolled destroy the heart, kidneys and eyes.
Prior to my confinement, my blood pressure had been under control and all my organs were in perfect condition. After returning from hospital, I wanted to leave this country at the earliest as I knew I would never be free from stress here. I said I needed to go to Kolkata urgently to collect a few important documents and other assorted things including bank cards and to sign my tax papers. That too, just the basic permission to visit my Kolkata flat to wrap up my life there, was denied for security reasons.
THEY FINALLY DID IT
Even though they constantly pressured me mentally to leave the country, I refused to budge. I was determined I would not leave this country. When they saw it was pointless trying to destroy my mind, they attempted to destroy my body. In this they succeeded by ruining my health which leaves me with no other alternative but to leave this country.
I WAS NOT ALLOWED TO SEE ANY DOCTOR FOR 'SECURITY REASONS' .
It is important that all this be known. I made repeated requests to be allowed to consult a medical specialist as my condition was growing worse with the ever increasing stress I had to face in this not-so-gilded cage. I was not allowed to see a doctor for more than two months. The decision makers asked the officials not to attend to me especially when I desperately needed a doctor. Two months after my initial request, I was eventually taken to a quack to an undisclosed third location who could, unsurprisingly, do nothing at all. I insisted that I had to see a cardiologist or at least a specialist. I was then told that this would entail a visit to the doctor's chamber. I agreed to go but was told that I would not be allowed to go to a doctor's chamber because of the 'security risks' involved. I fell very ill and told the officials
I was likely to have a heart attack. After a few days, at the same undisclosed location, I was allowed to see a doctor from the AIIMS who prescribed some medicines after taking which I fainted. The same night I was admitted to hospital where my blood pressure fell alarmingly and had to be given life-saving-drugs to survive. The doctors told me that I needed to spend two or three weeks in hospital but the officials whisked me away from the critical care unit after just three days and took me directly to meet the Minister for External Affairs. The Minister asked me to leave the country the shock of which made my blood pressure shoot up to 220/120. I was rushed to the hospital but the doctors were instructed by the officials not to admit me for 'security reasons'. In my not-so-gilded cage, I had no help at all.
FACTS
It has been nearly eight months that I have been living under virtual house arrest, in a prison without any facilities. I have been asked continuously by the government to leave this country. Naturally, this has upset me a great deal as I left Europe to relocate to India; to make India my permanent home. I settled in Kolkata where I was living peacefully in a Bengali milieu. I was very active helping oppressed women and writing feminist and humanist literature. Just because a few Muslim fundamentalists objected to my being in this country, I was first imprisoned in Kolkata and then moved to Delhi. In order for the politicians to secure their Muslim vote bank, I had to be locked up and, as a consequence, my health was irreparably destroyed.
IMPORTANT
Taslima Nasreen
See also the article "Can anybody live like this?" and other reports about Taslima's situation: www.rationalistinternational.net) We must put the Afghans firstThere's more to Canada's commitment than deploying troops until 2011 We are missing the boat on Afghanistan. By focusing debate disproportionately on deploying troops and extending Canada's mission, we have created space for the real spoilers in that country to wreak havoc unimpeded. Those spoilers include wretched poverty, deforestation, corruption in government and in NGOs, a lack of support to the agricultural sector, aid that lacks monitoring and regular assessment, little access to quality higher education, growing unemployment, and a failure to build Afghanistan's human resources and professional capacity. Failure to change our approach and to raise our level of investment in these issues is what will ultimately make a permanent peace in Afghanistan impossible. We are also approaching Afghanistan in a vacuum, as our government completely ignores the powerful role of Pakistan in perpetrating violent conflict and instability in southern and eastern Afghanistan. Most informed commentators, such as Afghanistan expert Barnett Rubin and former NPR journalist and current Kandahar resident Sarah Chayes, point to action and diplomacy with Pakistan as the missing piece in efforts to end the war in Afghanistan. This is also a point repeatedly brought up by ordinary Afghans whom I encounter in my travels. Yet, little heed has been paid them. The costs will be significant. LAURYN OATES Vice-president of Canadian Women for Women in Afghanistan March 14, 2008 at 7:28 AM EDT http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080314.wwcoafghan14/BNStory/Afghanistan/ The role of Pakistan is one key issue that no major political player has even begun to address, and it is off the agenda entirely of those who posit a "troops out" position in Canada. Another challenge it seems anyone trying to influence policy finds convenient to ignore is that the Afghan government is not the only corrupt institution in the country. International organizations working in Afghanistan and local Afghan non-governmental organizations are corrupt, too, a fact well-known among the seasoned expat community in Kabul and the disillusioned Afghans who have witnessed one failed development project after another on their doorsteps. Perhaps this is a less popular truth than the tendency to fall back on claiming that the Afghan government is illegitimate (though elected), as the NDP would have it, in place of actually proposing viable options to stabilize and support Afghanistan. We must address weaknesses in the delivery of aid through the Afghan government, as well as other channels, including the World Bank (which wastes funds on bloated staff salaries and benefits), the United Nations (whose excessive bureaucracy eats away donor money), and international NGOs (which frequently impose template projects not appropriate or functional in the Afghan context), and Afghan implementing NGOs (which all too frequently function as family businesses). Canada is pouring millions of badly needed dollars into Afghanistan but is not effectively monitoring this aid. And the public is allowing this to happen by failing to demand accountability. We are too preoccupied holding demonstrations against military intervention that reduce perception of the Afghan conflict to a simplistic matter of the presence of soldiers rather than a holistic human-security approach that addresses the multiple dimensions of instability in that country. Oxfam, a lead development agency funding programs in Afghanistan, has called for an independent UN body to assess aid effectiveness; Canada would be well-advised to take this into consideration, and the Canadian public must demand that it do so. Perhaps the most critical issue we have failed to address is an honest assessment of what a Taliban government would actually look like, and an understanding of how our actions in Canada may determine whether such a government is allowed to come to power again. There have been few other extremist groups in recent history with such a profound commitment to misogyny or a human-rights record as appalling as the Taliban's. Where there is "local support" for the Taliban, it is usually because the Taliban are terrorizing the locals and leaving them no other choice. In the Taliban stronghold of Ghazni, which I visited two weeks ago, I learned that people are starving to death because insurgents have threatened death if they venture into town to collect World Food Program rations. Those who push for negotiations with the Taliban must come to terms with the fact that the Taliban simply do not represent Afghans. As much as 40 per cent of the Taliban are Pakistanis, and more yet are Chechens, Uzbeks, Arabs and North Africans. There are also no Taliban women - so how can they claim to represent more than half of the Afghan population? The Taliban are being financed and supported in Pakistan; we must stop viewing them as a purely Afghan phenomenon and consider that the vast majority of Afghans want nothing to do with them. They are seen as radical fascists who have deviated from, and distorted, the true Islam. If we do not urgently refocus our debate and put the needs and interests of Afghans at the heart of our discussions, we will leave a bleak smear in the Canadian history of international interventionism, a smear that will bring us shame in the history books our children will read. We must ensure that we are finding constructive solutions to the underlying problems plaguing Afghanistan and to the issues that Afghans point to as priorities, and not merely to our own insular interests. We have limited time to start making a genuine effort to understand Afghanistan, its history and its people, and to recapture what we have lost of our identity as humanitarians and peace-builders. Lauryn Oates, who lives in Vancouver, recently returned from her seventh trip to Afghanistan. Liberals still haven't gotten over itThe Liberals are attacking the Prime Minister for cancelling a national child care plan and the Court Challenges Program. A Liberal motion now before our MPs asks them to "condemn the irresponsible and self-serving actions on Nov. 25, 2005, by the NDP and the BQ which led to the installation of a government that is hostile to the rights and needs of vulnerable Canadians."
The "actions on Nov. 25" were the defeat of the last Liberal government. The Liberals seem to believe people think that it is important. Perhaps if they recounted these events accurately they would let it go.
Do you want to know which actions led to Harper’s minority win? Then count the number of seats held by each party before the Christmas election campaign.
In Nov. 2005 the NDP didn't have enough seats to save the Liberals even if they wanted to. Two Liberal MPs had quit over the sponsorship scandal. Once the BQ, the Conservatives and the Independents decided the Liberals were going down it was guaranteed to happen.
Jack Layton’s NDP couldn’t support a government that: was tainted by the sponsorship scandal; had broken every environmental treaty it had signed for the last 24 years; had refused to make any concessions; and would be defeated no matter what Jack Layton did.
Jack Layton brokered a compromise with the BQ and the Conservatives in Nov. 2005 whereby a vote would be postponed until 2006. The Liberals refused it.
If the Conservatives are running "a government that is hostile to the rights and needs of vulnerable Canadians" then why abstain when faced with bills they allegedly oppose? But when you can’t count what choice do you have but to abstain?
Dave Mann Barack Obama's response to the State of the Union Jan 28th 2008"It’s time to heed our military commanders by increasing our commitment to Afghanistan, and it’s time to protect the American people by taking the fight to al Qaeda."
Vote Mel Kraley in Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo"Some have suggested that with my military background it’s strange that I would seek a nomination with the NDP. That of course is nonsense. I want to tell you that I have seen more than my fair share of suffering over the years. And whether it’s the suffering of Eastern Europeans caught in a war or the suffering of working Albertan’s trying to find even a scrap of Eddie’s so called “Alberta Advantage” - the real enemies are the vested interests that control our economy and are served by our government.
We are working people. We are the people that build and service the economic engine of our province and of the country for that matter. Simply put, Brian Mason and the Alberta NDP are on our side. The Conservatives have never been on our side and the Liberals these days are no better. The Tories and the Liberals are both paying the piper. Both Stelmach and Taft are on the side of big oil companies and other large corporations that make huge contributions to both of their parties. Whether we talk about fair rents, affordable housing, protecting the environment or allowing our seniors to live in dignity at home I have watched the Liberals and the Conservatives stick up for their friends and donors in corporate boardrooms." - Mel Kraley, nomination speech, January 13, 2008, Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo (Alberta NDP) Full Speech:
Good evening Brothers & Sisters, members and guests. I am honoured by your support and humbled by the responsibility you have given me this evening. I don’t plan to speak for a long period tonight. Those that know me know that I would rather be doing something about a problem rather than talking about the problem. But we do have problems in this province; provincial problems that manifest themselves in this constituency more than any other constituency in Alberta. So please allow me a few minutes to discuss what I think we need to do to correct these problems and, in fairness to you, a few minutes to tell you about myself, why I was driven to political activism and why I need your help. Like many working people, I have done a number of stints here in Fort McMurray over the years, plying my trade as a journeyman electrician. For the past year I have resided in Fort McMurray full time as an Assistant Business Manager with the Electrical Workers Union. My partner, Joyce, won’t like to hear me say I’m a resident of our fair town…she and my three wonderful step-kids reside in Gibbons along with some of my belongings. Occasionally I am able to join them there for a weekend but not often enough. I’m sure my union brothers and sisters here tonight can all attest to the never ending work load of trying to represent working people here in 21st century Alberta. I am currently heading up an IBEW initiative called “Helmets to Hardhats” offering our servicemen and women an opportunity to enter the electrical trades after leaving the service. But enough about me for now, I hope we all have many opportunities to get to know each other better over the coming months as we join together to try and provide working people and working families the kind of representation they deserve. What I really want to talk about is why I have sought the nomination and why I am running for the NDP in this election. Some have suggested that with my military background it’s strange that I would seek a nomination with the NDP. That of course is nonsense. I want to tell you that I have seen more than my fair share of suffering over the years. And whether it’s the suffering of Eastern Europeans caught in a war or the suffering of working Albertan’s trying to find even a scrap of Eddie’s so called “Alberta Advantage” - the real enemies are the vested interests that control our economy and are served by our government. We are working people. We are the people that build and service the economic engine of our province and of the country for that matter. Simply put, Brian Mason and the Alberta NDP are on our side. The Conservatives have never been on our side and the Liberals these days are no better. The Tories and the Liberals are both paying the piper. Both Stelmach and Taft are on the side of big oil companies and other large corporations that make huge contributions to both of their parties. Whether we talk about fair rents, affordable housing, protecting the environment or allowing our seniors to live in dignity at home I have watched the Liberals and the Conservatives stick up for their friends and donors in corporate boardrooms. I have seen Brian Mason and our Caucus in Edmonton stand up for ordinary Albertans. The Liberals and the Conservatives voted for tax cuts for profitable corporations instead of putting money back into our schools and seniors facilities. Tax cuts instead of ensuring the resources were there to twin that highway out there before one more family has to loose a parent! No, no, Taft and Stelmach protect there corporate donors that fly in and out while they ignore our needs; the needs of middle class Albertans. Over the past year my union has fought the unfair Labour Code in this province. Brian Mason and the NDP were there. The Conservatives protect the status quo and the Liberals pretend to support working people while ignoring us in their back-room caucus discussions. Over the past year my union has fought the illegal and unethical use of temporary foreign workers. Brian Mason and the NDP were there. The Tories of course support the needs of the corporations in their desire to drive down labour costs and the Liberals do nothing but suggest maybe we should also bring foreign workers in under the provincial nominee program. Over the past year my union has fought the Tories efforts to move more and more raw bitumen out of Alberta. Stelmach sat on his hands while the Keystone Pipeline was approved. He has done nothing to prevent the upcoming approval of the Alberta Clipper pipeline which will send our jobs and our futures down the pipeline to the US. Meanwhile the Liberals answer is to ship it to non-existent up graders in Saskatchewan and BC. Might the Liberals be influenced by the huge donations they get from Enbridge and other corporate giants? The NDP believes if it’s mined here it should be refined here. Brian Mason believes our long term future is more important than short term corporate profits. I have seen first hand that the only party that truly represents working people is the NDP. That’s why I’m proud to be your candidate and proud that over 40% of the New Democrat candidates in this election are from Labour. Brian Mason and the NDP are on our side. The Liberals and Conservatives are not. That’s why I’m running. I need your help. This constituency is a microcosm of all the social ills that occur in this province when corporate interests run roughshod over the interests of ordinary Albertans. Thank you for this honour. I will do my best as your candidate. I need your help to succeed. Canada-Afghanistan Solidarity CommitteeSubmission to the Independent Panel on Canada's Future Role in Afghanistan: The Honourable John Manley, Derek Burney, the Honourable Jake Epp, the Honourable Paul Tellier, Pamela Wallin. November 28, 2007. Dear Panel Members: The Canada-Afghanistan Solidarity Committee is a recently-formed association Canadians from all walks of life who are united in a commitment to the principle that as Canadians,we must honour our obligations to the cause of solidarity with the people of Afghanistan. This submission is our first public statement. Among those who have agreed to lend their names to this initiative (see appended) are people of the Left, and people from across the political spectrum, including a former lieutenant-governor and two former Progressive Conservative cabinet ministers. We are New Democrats, Liberals, Conservatives, and people of no particular political affiliation. We are Muslims, Jews, Christians, and atheists. We are authors, journalists, academics, gay rights activists, student activists, Afghan-Canadians, and feminists. The Committee's position on Canada's engagement in Afghanistan, in sum, is this: We must stay. Human rights are universal. The United Nations calls for and expects Canada to remain dedicated to Afghanistan's reconstruction and to the battle against terrorism there. We recognize that a robust military engagement, with the UN's sanction and the consent of the Government of Afghanistan, is vital and necessary. By the words "we must stay," we must clearly and explicitly oppose Option 4 among the four options the Independent Panel has been charged with considering, namely: "Withdraw all Canadian military forces from Afghanistan after February 2009 except those required to provide personal security for any remaining civilian employees." Option 4 is an indefensible option from the perspective of Canada's commitment to the universality of human rights and our country's proud dedication to multilateralism. We recognize the conflict in Afghanistan as a liberation struggle, waged by the Afghan people and their allies, against oppression, against obscurantism, illiteracy, and the most brutal forms of misogyny. It is a fight for democracy, and for peace, order, and good government. It is also a struggle waged by the sovereign Government of Afghanistan, a member state of the United Nations, against illegal armed groups that seek to overturn the democratic will of the Afghan people. In Afghanistan, the great global struggle for the recognition and protection of basic human rights – universal rights - is being waged with a particular and necessary ferocity. We cannot and must not retreat from that struggle. The objective of extending and securing the sovereignty of the Government of Afghanistan to all corners of that great country cannot be achieved without a robust international military presence. Canada is one the richest countries on earth, and as such we have absolutely no excuse to shirk from our duty to make a proper and effective contribution to that military engagement. For the Government of Canada to adopt Option 4 as a convenient policy response to what we concede is a great deal of confusion, partisanship, anxiety and incoherence in the current "public debate" about Afghanistan in Canada, would be a catastrophic abdication of leadership. Option 4 represents a rebuke to the United Nations, which consistently calls upon those of its member states with soldiers in Afghanistan to maintain and indeed increase their contributions to the necessary military response to such "insurgent" groups as the Taliban that operate there. Further, Option 4 would reduce Canada – a country with one of the best-equipped and most-experienced armed forces in NATO - to a weak, junior partner in the International Security and Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan. The Canadian Forces would be reduced to the level of a group of security guards. The members of the Canada-Afghanistan Solidarity Committee harbour a range of reservations and misgivings over the proposed course of action set out in Option 3, namely: "Shift the focus of Canadian military and civilian security, development and governance efforts to another region of Afghanistan." We recognize that Canada, by its engagement in Kandahar – an area where acute conditions of lawlessness and "insurgency" prevail - has suffered greatly, and arguably disproportionately, in the terrible death and injury of our soldiers there. We also recognize that there is no shame in wanting another a NATO partner to relieve us of our particular burden in Kandahar. However, to simply abandon Canada's multi-faceted efforts in Kandahar Province for "another region" would be a perilous and precipitous decision. Also, Option 3's underlying but unspoken assumption - that leaving Kandahar would leave Canadian soldiers more safe from harm – is very likely to be a false assumption. Option 3 also appears to be based at least partly upon the untested notion that there is another NATO partner ready to assume the lead role in Kandahar, and that a new NATO partner could simply pick up in Kandahar, successfully and effectively, where Canada left off. Anti-democratic and illegal armed groups in Afghanistan are not now confined to Kandahar, and there is no reason to assume that the forces now operating in Kandahar would simply remain in that Province and leave the rest of country free from harm should Canada merely "shift" its efforts elsewhere. Just as likely, Kandahar itself could become the kind of "safe haven" currently associated with certain border regions in Pakistan. In considering Option 3, we strongly urge panel members to bear in mind the risk of squandering Canada's efforts that option threatens (and as should be obvious, this point also pertains to Option 4), not least is the blood Canadians have shed in Kandahar. It would also be unrealistic to imagine that the priceless and irreplaceable expertise and experience Canadians have developed in Kandahar Province will necessarily accrue to a NATO successor in the turmoil of the vacuum we would leave behind there. Because we acknowledge that a robust Canadian military engagement is vital and necessary, and is expected of our country by both the United Nations and the Government of Afghanistan, we see little merit in Option 2: "Focus on development and governance in Kandahar, with sufficient military to provide effective protection for our civilians engaged in development and governance efforts. This would require another country (or countries) to provide a military force sufficient to ensure the necessary security in which such efforts can take place in Kandahar province." While this option at least anticipates a continuance of Canada's development-and-governance efforts in Kandahar, built upon Canada's leadership in the Kandahar Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT), Option 2 nonetheless may result in a combination of the untenable aspects of Option 4 with the unrealistic expectations of Option 3. Similarly, we discern what we fear is a fatal flaw in Option 1: "Train, support and develop the Afghan army and police towards a self-sustaining capacity in Kandahar Province, with a phased withdrawal of Canadian troops starting in February 2009 consistent with progress towards this objective." Nevertheless, the mandate of the Independent Panel on Canada's Future Role in Afghanistan allows the Panel to consider each of the aforementioned options "without intending to exclude others."Consequently, we urge you to consider Option 1 as a starting point, amended appropriately, and as the basis for the Panel's recommendations to government. We wholeheartedly support the proposition that Canada and its NATO partners should rededicate and enhance efforts to "train, support and develop" the Afghan Army and the Afghan National Police, in Kandahar Province, and elsewhere in Afghanistan. But there are fundamental problems with a commitment to a "phased withdrawal" by 2009, and the terminology "consistent with progress" is too vague to be of use. The problems with Option 1 that we would like panel members to acknowledge and address by amendment are twofold. The first is that, as written, Option 1 is based largely on wishful thinking, and to a lesser extent, bureaucratic convenience. There is compelling evidence to suggest that neither the Afghan Army nor the Afghan National Police, individually or in combination, will be capable of standing on their own by 2009, sufficient to match the security and counter-insurgency capacity Canada is providing in Kandahar Province – a capacity which in itself is arguably insufficient to the challenge at hand. By all the evidence available to us, we see no cause for Canada to consider planning for a phased withdrawal of troops from Kandahar, as anticipated by Option 1, at any date before 2011. The Afghanistan Compact, to which Canada and roughly 50 other nations are signatories, sets "by end-2010" as the date for a variety of benchmarks for "a nationally respected, professional, ethnically balanced" Afghan National Army, fully established, democratically accountable, organized and trained, adequately equipped, sufficient to maintain Afghanistan's national security, and meeting several more standards, including troop levels. "By end-2010" is the benchmark for a variety of other objectives set out in the Afghan Compact that include targets for the Afghan National Police, the Afghan Border Police, the disbandment of illegal armed groups, the elimination of the illegal opium trade, meeting Afghanistan's obligations under the Ottawa Convention on landmines, and so on.
While Canada's specific commitment to leading the Kandahar Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) carries no direct obligation beyond 2009, we argue that it is the end of 2010, and certainly not before, that Canada should set as an appropriate time to review its overall military commitments in Afghanistan. Canada should make its troop commitment decisions contingent upon measurable progress as set out in the relevant provisions of the Afghanistan Compact., rather than merely "consistent with" progress.
Specific Observations
1. Negotiating with the "Taliban."
Much has been made of the prospects for negotiating with the Taliban as a new and imaginative approach to peace in Afghanistan. That prospect must be situated in its factual and historical context.
Firstly, although the Canadian Forces may negotiate the surrender of armed criminals our soldiers happen to engage, Canada is not entitled to trespass on the sovereignty of Afghanistan by negotiating with illegal armed groups in the absence of Afghan government direction.
Secondly, the Afghan government, with the assistance of Canada and other of its partners in a United Nations initiative, had already negotiated the disarmament, demobilization and reintegration of roughly 56,000 former combatants well before the idea of negotiating with the Taliban came into vogue.
Thirdly, Afghan president Hamid Karzai has been clear from the outset of his term of office that he is prepared to negotiate with any armed group that is prepared to lay down its weapons. Indeed, President Karzai has engaged representatives of illegal armed groups directly in discussions.
Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, while there is scant evidence that the Taliban's hard-core jihadist leadership is interested in any such entreaties, Canada can and should demand that the Government of Afghanistan should not under any circumstances contravene its international commitments by "negotiating out" the rights of women in any talks with the Taliban, or in the establishment of any power-sharing agreement.
2. A distinct Canadian approach.
Canada is a sovereign nation and must make every effort to determine its own distinct contribution to the United Nations' efforts to reconstruct Afghanistan and assist the Afghan government in extending the rule of law throughout the country. We must take particular care to confront the misapprehension that Canada's role in Afghanistan is simply the function of an alliance with the United States of America.
It is not just that this is untrue. It is also a misapprehension that has severely inhibited the vigorous and necessary debate in Canada about what our policy options in Afghanistan can and should be. It is a misrepresentation of Canada's purposes and objectives in Afghanistan, and it has cast a cloud over Canada's role as an independent member of NATO and as a member of the UN's International Security and Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan.
Further, Canada would be well advised to distance itself from the United States' Operation Enduring Freedom owing to the association of that operation with the unnecessary deaths of Afghan civilians. Canada would also benefit from a more transparent disassociation from the costly and counterproductive opium-eradication program as currently prosecuted under American leadership.
We recognize that the suppression of the opium trade is an objective of the Afghanistan Compact and is strongly supported by the Government of Afghanistan. But Canada would be of greater assistance to the Afghan government, and perhaps especially to the impoverished farmers of Kandahar, if we expended more effort in the identification of more practical and effective solutions to the problem of illegal opium production, and alternatives to illegal opium production. We defer to the Senlis Council, the Agha Khan Foundation and other civil-society and aid organizations who are working on these solutions.
3. Development aid and reconstruction initiatives.
While these aspects of Canada's engagement are not specific to the mandate of the Independent Panel, development and diplomacy are nonetheless inextricably linked to the defence aspects of Canada's Afghan mission. It is clear that the Canadian Forces must play a direct role in development efforts in the volatile Kandahar Province.
Canada should increase or at the very least maintain current levels of funding support for the Afghan Government, the United Nations in Afghanistan, and international non-government organizations. Canada should also demonstrate a heightened commitment to the direct engagement of Afghan people, and Afghan civil society institutions, in development and reconstruction initiatives.
The federal government must also make far greater efforts to ensure that Canadians are fully informed of the development and reconstruction work undertaken in their name in Afghanistan.
We should also point out that the Canada-Afghanistan Solidarity Committee does not confine itself to advocating on government policy alone. We look to the Canadian Women for Women in Afghanistan (W4WA) as an example of the kind of concrete solidarity that Canadians as individuals, as students, as trade unionists, and as members of civil-society organizations can offer the people of Afghanistan.
The W4WA, a volunteer organization, has raised $2 million since 1996, which has employed hundreds of teachers in Afghanistan adn has provided for the purchase of books, the expenses of an orphanage, medical supplies, school guards, cooks, and so on.
General Observations
Those of us who formulated the idea of the Canada-Afghanistan Solidarity Committee did so with an understanding that a progressive, internationalist, and idealistic Canadian policy must also be realistic and cautious. We saw that there was no short-term solution to Afghanistan's problems.
While terms such as "exit strategy" and "Canada's traditional peacekeeping role" are commonplace in the lexicon of Canada's debates over the Afghanistan question, what is regrettably less evident is the recognition that exit strategies must be adaptive and contingent upon real-world events, and responsive to measurable progress.
Afghanistan's problems are both global and regional, and they must be understood in their geopolitical context. It is trite to say "there is no military solution" in Afghanistan - no one is arguing that there is. But "peacekeeping" is not an option. There are well-armed anti-government combatants, both foreign and domestic, actively waging war in Afghanistan. So, there are no truce lines to patrol, there is no ceasefire to monitor, and there is no "traditional" peacekeeping role to which Canada might return there. There is no peace to keep.
It should also be remembered that Canada's peacekeeping commitments, like our commitment in Afghanistan, have been often bloody affairs that have cost the lives of many Canadians soldiers. Canada's peacekeeping missions have also rarely been short-term engagements, with handily scheduled "exit strategies." Our role in Cyprus alone involved the commitment of a full battalion, from 1964 to 1993.
It is not just the absence of clarity that has confounded what should be a thoughtfully argued, historic national debate about Canada's role in Afghanistan. The debate has also been corroded by partisanship and political point-scoring, and the multilateral basis of Canada's commitment in Afghanistan has been eclipsed by an unseemly preoccupation with the American interests and intentions in Afghanistan, both real and imaginary. Canada's Afghan engagement is a life-and death matter, a question of pressing national and international importance, and yet the debate has been infantilized by a wholly false context, with its own invented hierarchy of virtue, from "anti-war" down to "pro-war."
This has eclipsed the most important questions - questions about how Canada can most concretely, effectively and efficiently show support and solidarity with the people of Afghanistan – people who have undergone the most horrific suffering and hardship over the past few decades. It in is those questions, and in that context, that we urge the members of the Independent Panel on Canada's Future Role in Afghanistan to see the task before them.
The Independent Panel is in a unique position to plainly set out what is truly at stake in the options its members have been asked to consider. This panel has an opportunity to change the tone, tenor and substance of the Afghanistan debate in Canada. We urge the Independent Panel to situate the aspirations and interests of the Afghan people themselves directly at the centre of its deliberations.
A commitment to Afghanistan that is consistent with Canada's best traditions, Canada's international reputation, and Canada's values, will require of Canadians a much deeper understanding of and familiarity with and respect for the Afghan people. What's necessary to that purpose is a clear understanding of what it is that ordinary Afghans think, and what ordinary Afghans say, about our role there.
The picture of Afghanistan that tends to emerge in the Canadian news media, inadvertently but nonetheless unfairly, unjustifiably and inaccurately, is of a nation that is inherently violent, irredeemably backward, and incorrigibly hostile to "the west." In fact, there is much that Canada shares with Afghanistan. Like Canada, Afghanistan is linguistically and ethnically diverse. Like Afghanistan, Canada not so long ago emerged from the shadow of empire. Canadians, too, only slowly gathered to themselves the fully sovereign jurisdiction over their own affairs, and it was only very recently that Canada devised a written constitutional basis for representative democracy and individual rights.
Canadians now share something with Afghans that is of a much greater consequence than vital trade relations, or profound historical ties, or deeply-shared and long-standing cultural affiliations. Canadians have shed blood in Afghanistan, fighting for its dignity and its freedom. We share that with the Afghan people, and it is not something to treat lightly.
Canadian politicians and opinion-makers, and the members of this panel, would be well served to follow the example of the Canadian Forces' civil-military cooperation units that routinely meet in shura with Afghan villagers. By that example, we mean a practice of close and careful attention to what the Afghan people themselves have to say about their needs and priorities, and a policy of being directly guided by those findings in the options we adopt.
To be uninformed and uninterested in what Afghans say about Canada's presence in their country, and to rely solely on Canadian public opinion as a guide for specific policy options in Afghanistan, is to engage in a fatal narcissism.
Owing to the preponderance of recently-gathered and readily-available evidence, we no longer have any excuse to be uninformed about what the Afghan people themselves say about their own needs and priorities. The evidence is available in the form of a dozen separate focus group analyses, issue-specific surveys, and major national and regional public opinion polls, all undertaken in Afghanistan. The evidence comes also in the form of the Afghan people's democratic will as expressed by their own constitutionally elected government.
The evidence is plain. The vast majority of the Afghan people, in their own voices, and through their own government, in its international commitments, say this: Stay. Human rights are universal. Canada should remain dedicated to Afghanistan's reconstruction, and to the battle against terrorism. A robust military engagement, with the UN''s sanction and the consent of the Government of Afghanistan, is vital and necessary.
While we do not purport to be "experts" in military strategy or foreign relations, we are citizens of a democracy, and as such we claim standing to address ourselves to these matters.
What we can say without any hesitation is that Canada cannot and must not simply wash its hands of Afghanistan. We must stand with the embryonic Afghan democracy against its enemies, and we must do this simply because we can do this. The opportunity has presented itself, and came to us unbidden, in September, 2001. To refuse the opportunity would be to turn our backs on everything that Canadians have ever claimed to stand for and believe in.
Although we are but one country among the 37 nations participating in the UN's International Security and Assistance Force in Afghanistan, Canada is major, leading contributor.
Any careless lessening of our resolve could easily run the risk of plunging Afghanistan back into total civil war. We would also risk emboldening the enemies of democracy the world round, not least of whom are those who continue to prey upon the proud Afghan people - the armed enemies of women, of literacy, of free speech, and of peace.
We should stay. Canadian Women for Women in AfghanistanTaslima Nasreen attacked in Hyderabad9 August 2007 Bangladeshi author and rationalist Taslima Nasrin being attacked during a book release function at Hyderabad. Rationalist International expresses shock and deep concern about the attack on Bangladeshi author Taslima Nasreen today (August 9) by the radical political outfit Majlis Ittehad-ul-Muslimeen (MIM) at the Hyderabad Press Club. She was releasing the Telegu translation of her book "Shodd". Taslima Nasreen is an Honorary Associate of Rationalist International. MIM activists, led by three state Legislative Council members (MLAs), raised slogans against Taslima and flung bouquets and chairs at her and others attending the function. However, no injuries have been reported so far. MIM leader Akhtar Khan, an MLA, said: "She is enemy of Islam, she is a black spot on Muslims.. We cannot bear an | ||||||||||