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Double standard for Canadians in trouble abroad

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Castro   

Double standard for Canadians in trouble abroad

 

June 14, 2007

Thomas Walkom

 

Governments like to say there is only one class of Canadian citizen – that no matter whether we were born here or naturalized, no matter our religion, ethnicity or political views, we receive equal treatment from the state. That is what governments like to say.

 

Unfortunately, this is not true – particularly when citizens find themselves in trouble abroad. If a middle-class Canadian tourist is killed in Mexico, the story is front-page news. The minister of foreign affairs makes statements; the Mexicans are asked to explain. Similarly, if a Canadian is mistreated by a country we disapprove of – like Iran or even China – Ottawa is happy to talk tough. The former Liberal government roasted Iran over the jailing and murder of Zahra Kazemi. Stephen Harper, the current prime minister, is taking China to task over its imprisonment of Huseyin Celil.

 

But if a Canadian is unlucky enough to run into trouble with a country that Ottawa does not wish to offend, it is a different story. In those cases, the government says little and does less. If the Canadian is unpopular or lacks media-savvy supporters, the government pays even less attention.

 

So it was with software engineer Maher Arar at the beginning of his torture-imprisonment ordeal. So it is still with Omar Khadr, the 20-year-old Canadian imprisoned for five years by the U.S. at Guantanamo Bay. The Canadian government finally moved on the Arar file, in large part because his wife cut a sympathetic figure with the public. The government is able to stall on the Khadr file, in large part because his family does not.

 

Bashir Makhtal is one of the latest to fall victim to this cruel double standard. Born in the rebellious ****** province of Ethiopia, raised in Somalia, a Canadian citizen since 1994, Makhtal – like many others in the Somali diaspora – returned to Mogadishu to do business. In his case, business consisted of importing used clothing.

 

In December, when Ethiopian troops invaded Somalia to oust the government of the day, he fled to the Kenyan border

 

What he didn't know, however, was that the geopolitics of the region had shifted. With a new military command based in Ethiopia, the U.S. quietly helped its client state unseat an Islamic government in Somalia that Washington didn't much like. Kenya was also onside with the Americans. Makhtal was caught in the middle.

 

Along with 84 others, he was illegally transferred by Kenya to Ethiopia via Somalia for interrogation and imprisonment. A letter received by his relatives in Hamilton says he was threatened with torture and forced to make a false confession. Consular officials have not been allowed to see him.

 

Ottawa's response has been spectacularly anemic. Makhtal's name been raised only once in the Commons. Foreign Affairs Minister Peter MacKay has said his usual little. He has not taken Kenya to task for deporting a Canadian to a country with a dodgy human rights record. Nor has he pressured Ethiopia to release Makhtal. The reason, it seems, is America. Amnesty International says U.S. agents have been involved in the interrogation of the Kenyan deportees. And when Washington is involved, the Canadian government stays mum.

 

Makhtal's relatives and friends continue to push for action. It is an uphill battle. They hold demonstrations that no one reports on. They receive only minimal attention from politicians. As someone who is neither famous nor beautiful, Makhtal does not lead the newscasts. In this very brutal version of Canadian Idol, he does not get many audience votes.

Toronto Star

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Haneefah   

Indeed, It's an uphill battle! I can't begin to describe how utterly disappointed I am with this government about this case. It's truly shameful.

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Kashafa   

Brother Makhtal is a G and the grandson of a G. Inshallah, not only will he come back but stronger and more determined then ever.

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Kashafa   

^ Yup, I've heard he's his grandson. Like the Prophet said about Abdullahi bin Zubair when commenting on their identical traits of bravery and geesinimo:"He is his Father's son"

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Warmoog   

CBC Radio covered Bashiir Makhtal's story once, as far as I know. One of his relatives (a cousin, if memory serves me right), a human rights advocate working on his case, and a rather clownish representative from the Ethiopian embassy in Ottawa were interviewed on the program. I haven't seen coverage of the case on television, however. What a shame.

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Haneefah   

^Didn't he sound like a complete retard? And they call him an ambassador.

 

Originally posted by xiinfaniin:

Allow u sahal eheladdiisa asagana u fududee.

Ameen Ya Rabb, isaga iyo intii la dhibaateysanba.

 

Inshallah, not only will he come back but stronger and more determined then ever.

Insha'Allah! The truth however is that af-libaax buu galey. And sometimes it's that very name that can get you in trouble. But qadarallah, may He (swt) protect us from our enemies.

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Warmoog   

^ Indeed, sister. Odaygii yaraa wuu is ceebeeyey. He was so desperately trying to do damage control and downplay the gravity of the matter (by telling flat-out lies, at times) when he could have simply been honest and forthright about what he knows of Bashiir's situation and whether his government is prepared to address the case or not.

 

Judging from the news reports that have been written about some of them, the people being held in these secret detention centres in Ethiopia seem to be of diverse backgrounds. As the CBC broadcaster pointed out though, Oromos and Somalis who hail from Kilinka Shanaad face the greatest risk of being harmed. Ilaahey ha u gargaaro dhamaantood.

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