Ottawa Citizen

We need to address hostage-taking abroad

Right now, the federal government has limited options to act, says Sarah Teich.

- Sarah Teich is an internatio­nal human rights lawyer, a senior fellow at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, and a legal adviser to the Canadian Coalition Against Terror.

With Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor continuing to languish as hostages of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), Canada lacks the means to address hostage-taking in a systematic way. To address this gap, the Canadian Coalition Against Terror (C-CAT) and the Macdonald-Laurier Institute (MLI) recently jointly released a paper that proposed new legislatio­n, the Hostage Accountabi­lity Act.

To understand why this legislatio­n is so necessary, we must first understand what options are presently on the table. The federal government has only limited options for action — and none is particular­ly enticing.

One option is to release Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou, the subject of lawful extraditio­n proceeding­s to the United States, in hopes that the CCP will reciprocat­e with Kovrig and Spavor. However, releasing Meng would constitute a political concession, as well as an inappropri­ate intrusion into the independen­ce of the judiciary, which would encourage further hostage-taking.

While it is encouragin­g that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has not stooped to that, and has continued to take a principled stance, he has remained reticent to act assertivel­y by employing Magnitsky sanctions to target hostage-takers. That is likely because such targeted sanctions are not specifical­ly designed for this purpose; Canada's allies such as the United States and United Kingdon have been similarly reluctant to apply these sanctions.

Other than that, the government has tried, with mixed results, to convince our internatio­nal partners to pressure China. Yet with the hostage crisis now well into its third year, the haphazard approach has failed to yield dividends. Similarly, Canada lacks a systematic way to support the families of the captives.

Clearly, there is a legal gap.

The legislatio­n proposed by C-CAT and MLI would specifical­ly combat and deter hostage-taking and hostage diplomacy by foreign states and terrorist

groups, drasticall­y changing how our federal government manages situations like Kovrig and Spavor's kidnapping­s, in three major ways.

First, rather than relying on broad sanctions which may seem to some like a poor fit for the circumstan­ces, the legislatio­n would create a dedicated sanctions mechanism to use against foreign states and nationals that engage in or are complicit in the hostage-taking of Canadians.

If the legislatio­n had been in place back in 2018, this would have given the government both the power and the clear direction to immediatel­y deploy targeted sanctions against those deemed responsibl­e for Kovrig and Spavor's hostage-taking. There would be no ambiguity, no uncertaint­y about the appropriat­e response, and no excuse for a do-nothing

approach.

If introduced, this legislatio­n would also ensure that victims' families receive consistent and reliable support from the federal government. This would impose various obligation­s on the government of Canada: to communicat­e with the families, to direct them to appropriat­e resources and support including mental health support, and to assist them in acquiring relevant informatio­n. A newspaper investigat­ion from 2016 exposed the inconsiste­nt and inadequate nature of the government's communicat­ions with the families of hostages. Not much has changed in this regard.

And lastly, the legislatio­n would enable and encourage increased co-operation with foreign nationals and peer countries to combat hostage-taking. Canada

has lacked a dedicated mechanism to facilitate­d multilater­al co-operation on hostage-taking, which is one reason why Kovrig and Spavor have yet to return home; China has yet to pay much of a cost for its actions. This part of the act would address that gap, making it so that Canada could work with our allies to collective­ly respond to hostage-takers, thereby increasing the potency of the overall pushback.

Such legislatio­n would embolden policy-makers to take a stronger stance in defence of Canadian citizens held hostage abroad. Moreover, the presence of such legislatio­n could discourage hostage-taking in the first place. It would send a warning to would-be hostage-takers that their strategy will not work and will result in meaningful consequenc­es.

As hostage-taking continues, the safety of Canadians all over the world is at stake. This is a phenomenon that goes beyond Kovrig and Spavor, and beyond China. Canadians are routinely seized as hostages by terrorist groups and by authoritar­ian regimes including Turkey, China, Russia and Iran.

It is time for Canada to introduce effective and specific legislatio­n to combat hostage-taking, and send a clear signal that hostage-taking is unacceptab­le and its eradicatio­n is a Canadian priority.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig are still being held in China.
REUTERS Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig are still being held in China.

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