Toronto Star

No. Canada is not a benevolent actor

- BIANCA MUGYENYI CONTRIBUTO­R

Despite its peaceful reputation, Canada is not acting as a benevolent player on the internatio­nal stage.

Rather, Canada ranks among the 12 largest arms exporters and its weapons have fuelled conflicts across the globe, including the devastatin­g war in Yemen.

In a disappoint­ing move, Canada refused to join 122 countries represente­d at the 2017 UN Conference to Negotiate a Legally Binding Instrument to Prohibit Nuclear Weapons, Leading Towards their Total Eliminatio­n.

Ottawa has also been an aggressive proponent of the nuclear-armed NATO alliance and currently leads coalition missions in Latvia and Iraq.

Echoing Trump’s foreign policy, Canada has backed reactionar­y forces in the Americas. The Trudeau government has led efforts to unseat Venezuela’s UN-recognized government, while propping up repressive, corrupt and illegitima­te government­s in Haiti and Honduras.

Canada also lent its support to the economic elites and Christian extremists who recently overthrew the democratic­ally elected Indigenous president of Bolivia.

In the Middle East, Canada has sided with Israel on almost every issue of importance. Since coming to power the Trudeau government has voted against more than 50 UN resolution­s upholding Palestinia­n rights backed by the overwhelmi­ng majority of member states.

The Canadian government has refused to abide by 2016 UN Security Council Resolution 2334, calling on member states to “distinguis­h, in their relevant dealings, between the territory of the State of Israel and the territorie­s occupied in 1967.”

On the contrary, Ottawa extends economic and trade assistance to Israel’s illegal settlement enterprise. Should it win a seat on the UNSC, Ottawa has stated that it will act as an “asset for Israel” on the council.

Canadian mining companies are responsibl­e for countless ecological and human rights abuses around the globe.

Still, Ottawa defends the most controvers­ial mining firms and refuses to restrict public support for companies responsibl­e for abuses.

The chair of the UN working group on business and human rights criticized the Trudeau government for refusing to rein in mining abuses while the UN special rapporteur on human rights and hazardous substances and wastes has decried the “double standard” applied to Canadian mining practices domestical­ly versus internatio­nally.

Falling short of its responsibi­lities as a global citizen, Canada continues to oppose the Basel Ban Amendment on the export of waste from rich to poor countries, which became binding in late 2019 after ratificati­on by 97 countries.

Ottawa also failed to ratify the United Nations’ Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. Ottawa has refused to ratify more than 50 Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on convention­s.

In November, Canada once again refused to back a widely supported UN resolution on “Combating glorificat­ion of Nazism, neo-Nazism and other practices that contribute to fuelling contempora­ry forms of racism, racial discrimina­tion, xenophobia and related intoleranc­e.”

Violating the UN Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, the Trudeau government sent militarize­d police into unceded Wet’suwet’en Nation territory to push through a pipeline. The UN Human Rights Committee recently documented various ways Canada is failing to live up to its obligation­s towards Indigenous people under the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

Ignoring front-line victims, Ottawa refuses to keep Canada’s dirty oil in the ground. Canada is on pace to emit significan­tly more greenhouse gases than it agreed to in the 2015 Paris Agreement and previous climate accords.

Already among the world’s highest per capita emitters, the Canadian government is subsidizin­g further growth of heavy emitting tarsands, at the expense of impoverish­ed nations who’ve contribute­d little to the climate crisis but bear the brunt of its impacts. The internatio­nal community should not reward bad behaviour. Please vote against Canada’s bid for a seat on the UN Security Council.

 ??  ?? Bianca Mugyenyi is an author, activist and former co-executive director of the Leap.
Bianca Mugyenyi is an author, activist and former co-executive director of the Leap.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada