Ottawa Citizen

CSIS in spotlight over ‘assurances’

Revealed to foreign states interest in individual­s despite torture risk

- JIM BRONSKILL

Newly released memos show Canada’s spy agency revealed its interest in people to foreign partners in two cases after receiving assurances the individual­s would not be tortured — a practice human rights advocates say shirks the law and puts vulnerable detainees at risk.

In one case, the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service got the green light from a high-level internal committee to interview a Canadian detained abroad as long as captors gave “proper assurances” the person would not be abused, the CSIS documents say.

In another case, the spy service received the go-ahead to send informatio­n to an allied agency about a terrorist target of mutual interest if such “assurances” were provided, the internal CSIS memos reveal.

The two cases were among 10 instances in which the CSIS informatio­n-sharing evaluation committee applied a ministeria­l directive on the use and sharing of informatio­n that may have been tainted by torture or could give rise to someone being brutalized in an overseas prison cell.

The Canadian Press used the Access to Informatio­n Act to obtain CSIS notes outlining the 10 cases — with names and other identifyin­g details stripped out — as well as a spring 2014 memo to spy service director Michel Coulombe.

The two cases in which CSIS sought promises that individual­s would not be abused raise “a red flag,” said Alex Neve, secretaryg­eneral of Amnesty Internatio­nal Canada, who called the practice an end-run around internatio­nal legal obligation­s.

“That’s always problemati­c from a human-rights perspectiv­e,” he said in an interview.

“It’s not reliable. And we have been deeply concerned about the ways in which government­s around the world have been increasing­ly relying on assurances.”

Many western government­s have resorted to the use of “diplomatic assurances” to circumvent their obligation­s under internatio­nal law, said Ottawa human-rights lawyer Paul Champ.

Courts and United Nations bodies have held — and, more tragically, experience has confirmed — that assurances are not adequate protection against torture and should not be used as an excuse for practices that might contribute to abuse, he said.

“Canada’s own experience in Afghanista­n amply demonstrat­ed that repeated assurances from the Afghan government did not stop Canadian-transferre­d detainees from being tortured.”

CSIS spokeswoma­n Tahera Mufti said the agency was “very cognizant” of its legal and ethical obligation­s in sharing informatio­n.

“We are very careful to ensure that everything we do to keep Canadians safe is consistent not just with Canadian law but Canadian values.”

The federal policy on foreign informatio­n-sharing, ushered in by the Conservati­ve government, has been roundly criticized by humanright­s advocates and opposition politician­s who say it effectivel­y condones torture, contrary to internatio­nal law and Canada’s UN commitment­s.

A four-page 2010 framework document, previously released under the access law, says when there is a “substantia­l risk” that sending informatio­n to, or soliciting informatio­n from, a foreign agency would result in torture — and it is unclear whether the risk can be managed through assurances or other means — the matter should be referred to the responsibl­e deputy minister or agency head.

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