The Peterborough Examiner

Canadian envoys unhappy in Saudi Arabia

Years of low morale come to head recently

- ANDY BLATCHFORD AND MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA — For years, Canadian diplomats posted in Saudi Arabia have battled low morale, the dust and noise of drawn-out renovation­s and the challenges of adjusting to life in the conservati­ve kingdom.

And all of this was before Ottawa’s relationsh­ip with Riyadh began to unravel from the highest levels down.

In August, Saudi Arabia lashed out at Canada after a tweet from Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland called on the regime to immediatel­y release detained human-rights activists.

Riyadh responded by freezing new trade, expelling Canada’s ambassador, recalling its own envoy from Ottawa, pulling medical students out of Canadian universiti­es and even cancelling flights to Toronto.

Last month’s killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the kingdom’s consulate in Istanbul put new strains on the relationsh­ip amid public outrage in Canada over a $15-billion arms deal with the regime. Canada has joined other countries in applying pressure on Riyadh to say what happened to Khashoggi.

Canada’s diplomatic outpost there is now on the front line of a challengin­g confrontat­ion between Ottawa and the kingdom, and diplomats on the ground have been struggling with their working conditions for years.

The troubles are laid out in detail in a 2013 federal report on the state of the mission. High turnover and vacancies in key jobs, problems female staff had working in a country where women’s freedoms are sharply limited, and the difficulti­es diplomats’ families faced there all contribute­d. A major renovation project was about to displace workers and take up some of the limited space in the diplomatic compound with temporary buildings.

Dennis Horak, Canada’s recently expelled ambassador, provided an update this week in an interview about diplomatic life in Saudi Arabia. He’ has served in worse postings, he said, and he believed morale was generally good during his own three-year stint at the top, but “it’s a difficult place.” Horak described frustratio­n among embassy staff that federal ministers rarely visited the country. Ministeria­l visits, while challengin­g for staff, lift their spirits and show them the government is paying attention to their work overseas, he said.

“It had been a substantia­l drop from when the Conservati­ves were there, and (former prime minister Stephen) Harper made a priority over the Middle East at least in terms of visits and their attention,” said Horak, who has criticized Freeland for her August tweet demanding the release of the imprisoned activists, which led the irked Saudi regime to expel him.

“And that wasn’t the case with this government and certainly not with Saudi Arabia. So that had an impact on morale.”

The 2013 federal report on the state of the mission underlined how low morale already was among the 18 diplomats and 40 hired locals.

“They have faced challenges in rebuilding programs and establishi­ng policies following long periods of high turnover and critical staff absences. On a more personal level, many (diplomats) or their family members have had difficulty adapting to the country,” said the document, prepared by the Foreign Affairs Department. “The mission operates in a difficult and complex environmen­t that can place significan­t stress on employees’ personal and profession­al lives. Furthermor­e, the mission is still recovering from extended periods over the last few years when key management positions were left vacant.”

The document said the mission’s commercial economic program in Riyadh faced the challenge that women were restricted from attending some events, which forced female trade commission­ers to rely on secondhand sources of informatio­n. Horak said half his staff were women and strict Saudi laws made their lives particular­ly difficult. For example, driving arrangemen­ts had to be made for them to go places until Saudi Arabia recently allowed women to drive themselves.

The report described the constructi­on as a “major midlife refit project” that would displace staff and be highly disruptive.

Ottawa pent nearly $3.8 million on the project last year, according to its recently released public accounts. Overall, it has spent more than $14 million toward nearly $15 million worth of contracts to modernize the grounds and the buildings.

 ?? BANDAR AL-JALOUD/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has introduced reforms to draw more foreign investment. But life there for foreign diplomats, like Canadians, is especially challengin­g from a woman’s perspectiv­e.
BANDAR AL-JALOUD/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has introduced reforms to draw more foreign investment. But life there for foreign diplomats, like Canadians, is especially challengin­g from a woman’s perspectiv­e.
 ??  ?? Dennis Horak, ex-ambassador
Dennis Horak, ex-ambassador

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