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All Afghan Detainees Likely Tortured: Diplomat
All detainees transferred by Canadians to Afghan prisons were likely tortured by Afghan officials and many of the prisoners were innocent, says a former senior diplomat with Canada's mission in Afghanistan.
Canadian diplomat Richard Colvin waits to testify before the Commons Special Committee on the Canadian Mission in Afghanistan on Parliament Hill in Ottawa November 18, 2009. (REUTERS/Chris Wattie) Appearing before a House of Commons committee Wednesday, Richard Colvin blasted the detainees policies of Canada and compared them with the policies of the British and the Netherlands.
The detainees were captured by Canadian soldiers then handed over to the Afghan intelligence service, called the NDS.
Colvin said Canada was taking six times as many detainees as British troops and 20 times as many as the Dutch.
He said unlike the British and Dutch, Canada did not monitor their conditions; took days, weeks or months to notify the Red Cross; kept poor records; and to prevent scrutiny, the Canadian Forces leadership concealed this behind "walls of secrecy."
"As I learned more about our detainee practices, I came to a conclusion they were contrary to Canada's values, contrary to Canada's interests, contrary to Canada's official policies and also contrary to international law. That is, they were un-Canadian, counterproductive and probably illegal.
"According to our information, the likelihood is that all the Afghans we handed over were tortured. For interrogators in Kandahar, it was a standard operating procedure," Colvin said.
He said the most common forms of torture were beatings, whipping with power cables, the use of electricity, knives, open flames and rape.
Colvin worked in Kandahar for the Department of Foreign Affairs in 2006. He later moved to Kabul, where he was second-in-command at the Canadian Embassy. In both jobs, Colvin visited detainees transferred by Canadian soldiers to Afghan prisons. He wrote reports about those visits and sent them to Ottawa.
Colvin told the committee that the detainees were not "high-value targets" such as IED bomb makers, al-Qaeda terrorists or Taliban commanders.
"According to a very authoritative source, many of the Afghans we detained had no connection to insurgency whatsoever," he said. "From an intelligence point of view, they had little or no value."
Colvin said some may have been foot soldiers or day fighters but many were just local people at the wrong place at the wrong time.
"In other words, we detained and handed over for severe torture a lot of innocent people."
Colvin said they began informing the Canadian Forces and Foreign Affairs officials about the detainee situation in 2006 with verbal and written reports.
He said the warnings were at first mostly ignored, but by April 2007, they were receiving written messages from government officials that in the future not to put things on paper, but instead use the telephone.
Colvin mentioned David Mulroney, a deputy minister who is now the ambassador to China, as one of the officials who didn't want to hear the allegations.
Colvin said when a new ambassador arrived in May, the paper trail on detainees was reduced and reports on detainees were at times "censored" with crucial information removed.
He said all of these steps were "extremely irregular."
At the time, the government denied there were any credible allegations of torture.
But Tories questioned the validity of Colvin's sources, saying the information he received concerning the allegations were from second-hand and third-hand reports.
Colvin's testimony "seemed dramatic, but under questioning it was revealed to be filmsy, inconsistent, unreliable," Laurie Hawn, parliamentary secretary to Defence Minister Peter MacKay told CBC News. "[He] did not come across as credible."
While he didn't doubt Colvin's sincerity, "every time something has happened in that mission, we have taken action," Hawn said. "And that's evidenced by the improvements in the prison, the training we've done, money we've invested, the visits we've had organized with the various authorities there."
Colvin also said he only spoke to four detainees himself and he had no way to guarantee those prisoners had in fact been captured by Canadian troops.
He also admitted he never raised the allegations with ministers who travelled through Kandahar.
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19 Comments so far
Show AllThis whistle-blower needs support. We can expect our government (Canadian govt) to try to ruin his credibility and whatever he may have left of a career. Based on other things I've heard directly from Canadians on the scene in Afghanistan, I have no doubt his allegations are correct.
NO -- Colvins credibility will not be questioned because Obama is in charge now not Bush!!!!
Today in the NYTimes is an article about two (phony) psychologists who promoted torture in the US military interogations of suspects. This is against the Geneva Convention and this quit as soon as Obama got into office and now they will face accusations. Here is the article:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/12/us/12psychs.html?pagewanted=3
Also Eric Holder is holding Jon Yoo and Beebe the two lawyers who crafted torture to be a legal process -- they may face removal of their law license.
Who said Obama does not do anything.
"Also Eric Holder is holding Jon Yoo and Beebe..." Where did you get this information? It isn't true.
And your NYT story about the psychologists is not from today, it's from last August. Have any charges been filed? No.
"Who said Obama does not do anything?" No one. Everyone admits Obama has given some speeches. Otherwise, Obama has done nothing but accelerate our descent into destruction.
(But maybe you intended to be ironic?)
Oh dear, say it's not so!
Has Colvin been napping all this time? Are Canadian diplomats really that naive?
Or is it a convenient device to pretend ignorance for - how many - 6? years, and then suddenly awaken to the truth too late to prevent or correct it?
Maher Arar who? Af is merely a repetition of Iraq; is Colvin deliberately blind to the pattern? Will our diplomats awaken to abuses in Pak in 2015+, finally?
The air must be different, up there, where the elite live.
(Well, at least he's admitting what needs to be admitted; some countries still need to learn how to do that.)
The truth is this has been discussed in Canada ever since the Canadian forces went over there. When Chretien and then Paul Martin Prime Minister there were claims that Afghani detainees being turned over to the Afghan Governmnet were being tortured.
Stephen Harper was in opposition then and jumped on that demanding answers. Indeed this in part led to the then defense Minister stepping down.
After that the then Liberals introduced measures they claimed would prevent such from happening again via inspections of detainees that Canada had turned over along with regular visits of these prisoners by the Canadian Military and Human rights groups.
Now Harper is PM. He is offended that people can even suggest such!
"He said the most common forms of torture were beatings, whipping with power cables, the use of electricity, knives, open flames and rape."
I think we shoud send Stephen Harper undercover posing as a detainee to investigate.
Canada should GET OUT of Afganistan NOW...what the hell are we doing there anyway? What is our national interest being served by being there?
Canada did all the heavy lifting while the USA was busy building their Iraqi Empire...we have done ENOUGH.
This Canadian diplomat is likely right on the mark. No, he wasn't napping, but diplomats have to be able to along to get along to just damn survive, and if they are obvious about being making waves, they don't last long. He did just what he should have by giving testimony before the Canadian House of Commons, and the MPs need to sort this out. That said the party leader for the Liberals is no paragon of virtue worth a damn and likely would follow the same wrong headed polices on this, thus it might be best for the Conservative or Tories to get one more general election victory to get this misguided Liberal Party leader out of the way and get a real Liberal as a party leader.
AD
Following my 6 years of university education in Canada from September 1970 to June 1976, I have been telling everyone I meet in the world (I have travelled in at least 40 countries, having worked for 22 years in international development institutions) that Canada is the most civilzed country in the world. Since I became a permanent resident of canada after my retirement five years ago, I have, with excruciating pain, found myself gradually revising that point of view, to the point where I am now reluctant to apply for citizenship. It was therefore very soothing on my 62 year-old heart to read His ExcellencyRichard Colvin's very humanitarian statement. May The Alimighty bless him for speaking the truth.
Yes, I am a Muslim, of Indian origin but with my parents born and bred in the eminently multi-cultural African country of Mauritius. But, I am very much a citizen of the world. Until, about 18 months ago, I was writing "I am a Muslim, borderline agnostic." Not any more. If the Afghan war intensifies or threatens to continue much longer, and my resentment at the refusal for the powers that be to understand, I shall go back to mauritius, maybe within six months. The loss will be my own, surely, but I shall be more at peace with myself.
How americanized the canadians have become.
They are batting 1,000.
They forced them to watch CBC and eat donuts
This is a big deal in Canada today. But the larger issue of why we're there can't really be seen on the radar behind all the rah-rahing. I find more solid info on Common Dreams than in the Canadian media, who soundly sleep. Thank you Mr. Colvin!
The fatasses in Canada are of the same cloth as those in the U.S. Colvin could give the same report to our Congress, changing only names, dates and times. Why is it that the fatasses always know more than those closest to the problem, indeed so much more that they can dismiss a report like this out of hand and without investigation on the sole basis of their wise judgment that it lacks credibility. All this is what happens in war, so that if they can't accept it, they should oppose war. Feigning ignorance, feigning patriotism, to deny horrors, should be abhorrent to principled leaders of any stripe and is absolutely unacceptable.
Our leaders are just as corrupt as the politicians in the US, they are equally insane, in the sense that they are filled with delusions, greed, power-hunger, narcissism, deception and other such evil tendencies and proclivities! And we the citizens, we have much guilt on our plates as well for voting in these monsters and allowing them to continue to take us down the road to perdition! Yes, we used to be one of the great peace-constructing countries of the world and now we have descended to the pits of fascism along with our master to the south! Shame on all of us for allowing this immoral and illegal war to continue!!
As a Canadian I feel ashamed. This is why we have become targets. Harpo will try to disable this diplomat. We need to stop this from happening. How can we do this?
I want Canadians to wake up! We need to be aware of the repercussions of inactivity. Write to all your politicians.Let them know Canadians do not , will not support torture or abuse of so called terrorists or even terrorists.
That makes us the same as the terrorist. We become the terrorist. It has been proven beyond a doubt if you torture someone they will confess to just about anything you want to prove.
STOP NOW! Get out before we look like the USA and BUSH. I am ashamed of our leaders trying to cover this up. They represent Canada and Canadians.
I do not want to be represented as a person who would disable a person, or who would torture a person or animal, because I would not.
Like many Canadians, I used to look down down at the U.S. when the Bush-Cheney gang was in power. Now, like so many Canadians, I feel increasingly ashamed of my country. Harper's climate change policy makes Obamba's look terrific, which tells you a lot. The torture disclosure is just sickening, and even more sickening is that Conservative Members of Parliament responded to Colvin's testimony by questioning his credibility.
What many Americans would not be aware of -- as well as many Canadians, since the corporate media tend to ignore it -- is that before becoming prime Minister, Stephen Harper worked for a reactionary outfit called the National Citizens Coalition that opposes the kind of tax-funded public policies that create a humane society. Sadly, the opposition to Harper's Conservatives is split amongst the Liberal Party (much like the Democrats), the social democratic NDP and the Greens, who have much more support than the U.S. Greens, but are more conservative. So the Harper gang, backed by plenty of corporate money, is slowly tightening its grip on power. A truly scary thought
Actually, the minority Conservatives only hold power with the convivance of one of the other parties. Lately it has been the left wing NDP shamlessly propping them up in exchange for crumbs.
I think a confidence vote should be held on this issue. See which party backs the Cons on tortures.
With allegations of Afghan security forces routinely sodomizing young men in villages, when Tajik police are being deployed against pashtun villagers, and pashtun police deployed against baloch or turk villagers, fueling the Afghan populations own infighting and mistrust of others (divide and conquer), the NATO-US forces are daily paying bribes to the various warlords that control the highways to get their bullets and medkits to the *frontlines*, indirectly (or directly) funding the taliban militias in the process, American forces have been deployed along the planned pipeline route, and foreign national corporations coming together to bid on Afghan natural resources, when 1/4 of the population is living below the dollar a day poverty line.
The war is entirely unjust on all levels, there is no pretext of honour, only the intent to facilitate the transfer of wealth from Afghanistan, and Turkmenistan.
While I would *like* to hope that a public inquiry puts the conservative members of parliament, and their lackeys, and the military and the DoD in front of the judiciary, I have the feeling the conservatives will attack this #2 diplomat in Kabul with everything they have to get out of meeting their international obligations as a signatory to the Geneva convention, to maintain their grip on power in Canada, and to continue to give kickbacks to the corporations that are ruining the planet in almost every possible way.
This article is a true condemnation of Canada's Bush league Conservative Government, which is high on punishment and low on human rights. It is a government unlike any the Canadian people have ever had to endure before. It spouts hypocrisy at every turn yet lends itself to grave injustices perpetrated in its name. A government such as this is more akin to something the US would have but is totally unCanadian. Is this form of repulsive governance a result of our foray into active warfare? Is it our collective punishment for the international evil we are perpetrating in Afghanistan? This government has also purposely refused to assist a Canadian to come home from imprisonment in Africa, has had to apologize for its complicity in Arar's torture and still hasn't asked for a Canadian child soldier to be returned to Canada from many years of imrisonment in the US. In short it has a lot of explaining to do.