"REDRESS"在OTTAWA图书馆有三本,可以借出来看看那段历史和日裔加拿大是怎样要赔偿的.
"Redress : inside the Japanese Canadian call for justice" by Roy Miki
http://www.lirico.ca/ipac20/ipac.js...o-eng&return_search=Return+to+Searching#focus
日本侨民在REDRESS中获得的具体赔偿(摘录自BOOK <<REDRESSS>>)
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A) $21,000 per individual redress, subject to application by eligible persons of Japanese ancestry who, during this period [from December 7,1941 to March 31,1949], were subjected to internment, relocation, deportation, loss of property or otherwise deprived of the full enjoyment of fundamental rights and freedoms based solely on the fact that they were of Japanese ancestry; each payment would be made in a tax-free lump sum, as expeditiously as possible;
b) $12 million to the Japanese-Canadian community, through the National J Association of Japanese Canadians, to undertake educational, social and cultural activities or programs that contribute to the well-being of the community or that promote human rights;
c) $12 million, on behalf of Japanese Canadians and in commemoration of those who suffered these injustices, and matched by a further $12 million from the Government of Canada, for the creation of a Canadian Race Relations Foundation that will foster racial harmony and cross-cultural understanding and help to eliminate racism;
d) subject to application by eligible persons, to clear the names of persons of Japanese ancestry who were convicted of violations under the War Measures Act or the National Emergency Transitional Powers Act;
e) subject to application by eligible persons, to grant Canadian citizenship to persons of Japanese ancestry still living who were expelled from Canada or had their citizenship revoked during the period 1941 to 1949, and to their living descendants;
f) to provide, through contractual arrangements, up to $3 million to the National Association of Japanese Canadians for their assistance, including community liaison, in administration of redress over the period of implementation.
During its pursuit of redress, the NAJC had also called on the federal government to rescind the War Measures Act, which had allowed for the victimization of Japanese Canadians solely on the basis of racial categorization. Earlier in 1988, the government had done just that, replacing it with what was called the Emergencies Act (made law in July 1988).
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