Court puts security certificates in limbo(多图)

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Posted AT 1:13 PM EST ON 23/02/07


http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20070223.wscoc0223/BNStory/National/home

Court puts security certificates in limbo

KIRK MAKIN AND TENILLE BONOGUORE

Globe and Mail Update and Canadian Press



The Supreme Court of Canada has voted unanimously to strike down a controversial federal procedure used to deport suspected terrorists as being a violation of life, liberty and security of the person.

The security certificate process is hopelessly flawed and must be redrafted by Parliament to eliminate the extreme secrecy in which hearings to determine the reasonableness of certificates take place, the court said on Friday.

While carefully paying heed to fears of terrorism and the special difficulties of protecting national security, the court said that certain elements of fairness cannot be dispensed with -- including the right of a detainee to know the case against them and to make full answer and defence.

"While there is a risk of catastrophic acts of violence, it would be foolhardy to require a lengthy review process before a certificate should be issued," the court said.


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The Supreme Court of Canada (Jonathan Hayward/CP Photo)



However it said the various forms of review in which a designated lawyer is empowered to act on behalf of detainees could pass constitutional muster.

Writing for a unanimous court, Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin suspended the effects of the ruling for one year to give the Federal Government time to craft a new security certificate process.

However, foreign nationals will benefit immediately from one aspect of the ruling which grants them a bail review within 48 hours of their first being detained -- a far shorter period than they must currently wait.

In the House of Commons, Conservative House leader Peter van Loan offered formal thanks to the court for its decision and signalled that the Tories would get to work trying to bring the legislation into accord with the Charter.

"We will be reviewing that decision and seeing if there is a way to ― and we are confident we can ― reconcile the need to protect the security of Canadians with the directions to Parliament from the court," Mr. van Loan said.

The ramifications of the decision will extend far beyond Canada's border, says Alex Neve, secretary general of Amnesty International Canada.

Speaking at a news conference following the judgment's release, Mr. Neve said the ruling debunked government claims that the security certificate system was fine.

"It's a ringing, profoundly important endorsement of one simple bedrock truth: Security is all about human rights," Mr. Neve said.

The ruling strengthens the Arar Commission's position in "conveying an unequivocal message" that fundamental rights will not be countenanced by the nation's senior judges, he said.

"That will be heard outside Canada as well in courtrooms, legislatures around the world, and it helps to reverse the global rollback in human rights that has been such a worrying trends worldwide since September 11th," he said.

The court said that while federal court judges who conduct security certificate reviews do play an unusually active role in testing secret evidence, they are not unacceptably "co-opted" by the process.

It said that there may always be some evidence that cannot be disclosed and must be heard in a secret hearing, yet that must be as minimal as possible.

"It may simply be so critical that it cannot be disclosed without risking national security," Chief Justice McLachlin wrote.

"This is a reality of our modern world. If Section 7 is to be satisfied, either the person must be given the necessary information or a substantial substitute for the information must be found. Neither is the case here."

It said that the onus on governments to move quickly in a proceeding becomes greater with passing time.

"Stringent release conditions . . . seriously limit individual liberty," the court added. "However they are less severe than incarceration."

The court said that the security certificate provisions do not violate the Charter right to equality or constitute cruel or unusual punishment.

The security certificate process -- enshrined within the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act -- has been a target of constant, harsh condemnation from civil libertarians.

The provisions pre-date the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, and allow for a non-resident to be designated as a risk to national security, detained indefinitely, and ultimately deported.

The detainees and their counsel are provided with only a vague summary of the allegations against them. Evidence to back up the allegations is given in secret to a judge, and neither the accused nor their lawyer can attend.

The three men behind the Supreme Court challenge ? Adil Charkaoui, Mohamed Harkat and Hassan Almrei ? had all spent several years behind bars before being released recently under tight conditions of house arrest and their agreement not to communicate with a wide range of individuals.

The conditions of their detention ? in a special holding unit nicknamed Guantanamo North ? led some of the detainees to resort to desperate tactics such as hunger strikes.

Mr. Almrei's lawyer Barbara Jackman said, without Friday's judgment, her unmarried client would have "had a very hard time" obtaining release from prison.

"This decision makes it at least possible that a court may release him without requiring that he have a wife to supervise him," Ms. Jackman said.

Her co-counsel John Norris said the court had risen above the "rhetoric of national security."

"They have recognized the fundamental importance of preserving the security of all of us, but, at the same time, have stated in the clearest possible terms that that must never be done at the expense of fundamental fairness," Mr. Norris said.
 
A Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer talks on his walkie talkie as he overlooks the main hall of the Supreme Court of Canada during the first day of hearings in Ottawa last June.

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Adil Charkaoui, one of the men challenging the use of security certificates, stands in front of a protest banner during a Supreme Court hearing on the matter last year.

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Hassan Almrei, centre, was also part of the court challenge leading up to Friday's ruling. This artist rendition was produced during a 2005 court hearing.

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The third man involved in the case, Mohamed Harkat, walks into his lawyer's office with his wife Sophie following a 2006 news conference.

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The use of security certificates has generated a great deal of protest in Canada. In 2003, family and friends of Canadian detainees gathered in Ottawa to make their voices heard.

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Khawla Charkaoui, then 22 months old, attends a 2003 protest against the use of security certificates.

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Posted AT 10:16 AM EST ON 23/02/07

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20070223.wfreezeside0223/BNStory/National

Six suspects held under security certificates

COLIN FREEZE

From The Globe and Mail, Feb. 16, 2007



Canada's controversial security-certificate process is being used in six ongoing cases and in one that was recently resolved.

None of the detainees has ever been charged with a crime. They face Immigration Act charges only, and deportation is the ultimate goal.

Most suspects spend years in jail battling Ottawa's attempts to send them back to their homelands. Concerns about overseas torture under repressive governments stall most cases.

In security-certificate cases, Canadian cabinet ministers and Federal Court judges who see secret intelligence need to be convinced there is "reasonable suspicion" someone is a threat. This is a far lower threshold than the "proof beyond reasonable doubt" standard used in criminal cases.



Those in jail:

Mohamed Zeki Mahjoub, alleged to be an al-Qaeda operative, who admits he once ran a farming operation for Osama bin Laden.

Ordered yesterday to be moved to house arrest, he was first detained in 2000 and is in the midst of an 84-day hunger strike protesting against the conditions he endured in prison.

Mahmoud Jaballah, suspected of being an al-Qaeda operative from Egypt, is alleged to have played some kind of undefined "communications relay" role in African embassy bombings in 1998.

He has been on a hunger strike for more than 70 days. A hearing on his bail case is imminent.

Hassan Almrei, a Syrian who admits he spent time in Afghanistan training camps, has been jailed since October, 2001.

His hunger strike has also passed the 70-day mark, but he will remain in prison for the foreseeable future.



Those released on forms of house arrest:

Adel Charkaoui, a Morroccan who was also arrested on allegations he trained in Afghanistan. Jailed in 2002, he made headlines in 2005 for being the first al-Qaeda-accused to be transferred to house arrest.

Mohamed Harkat, an Algerian, is alleged to be a graduate of the training camps. He was jailed in 2003, but released on house arrest last year.

Manickavasagam Suresh is often overlooked because he is not an al-Qaeda suspect. This Toronto resident was arrested in 1995 on allegations he was a major fundraiser for the Tamil Tigers.

Three years later he was granted bail. Concerns he'd be tortured in Sri Lanka have kept him in Canada ever since.


The recently departed:

Paul William Hampel, alleged to be a Russian spy, was removed to Moscow this fall. There were no concerns he'd be tortured and he didn't fight the removal.
 
果然弱智,用不了多久,中国在新疆的反恐,就会被指责为 ‘违反人权自由宪章’

愤青的弱智经常以奋不顾身的形式表现。
 
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