Toronto Star

Feds must cancel directives leading to torture, victim says

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA— A prominent Canadian victim of abuse behind bars in Syria is calling on the government to cancel controvers­ial directives that allow for the sharing of intelligen­ce that could lead to torture.

Abdullah Almalki, a Canadian who was imprisoned and tortured in Syria for almost two years, said Tuesday it is time the Liberals ditched the policy that was enacted by the previous Conservati­ve government.

Almalki said the current government must end Canada’s “previous complicity in torture.”

The Liberals say they are reviewing the directives as part of a broader security review.

Almalki and other human rights activists said cancelling the directives is the next logical step for the government after it announced Monday it was prepared to join a key United Nations anti-torture agreement more than a decade after it was first passed.

Almalki was part of a group of human rights activists that praised Monday’s surprise announceme­nt by Foreign Af- fairs Minister Stéphane Dion.

But they said the government must go further, and cancel the torture directives.

“Many of the prisoners I’ve interviewe­d have reverted to saying things that necessaril­y didn’t happen or they were told to confess in order to avoid the torture,” said Mohamed Fahmy, the Canadian journalist who was imprisoned in Egypt.

Alex Neve, the head of Amnesty Internatio­nal Canada, said his organizati­on has been campaignin­g for years to get the controvers­ial torture directives thrown out.

“It certainly would be very much in keeping with the spirit of what we heard yesterday . . . to rescind that very troubling ministeria­l direction and bring our intelligen­ce sharing practices into line with our internatio­nal obligation­s,” said Neve.

Fahmy warned Dion and the provinces not to dither and to bring Canada into full compliance with the anti-torture convention within one year.

The federal government must now consult with the provinces on the legal way forward for Canada to formally join the UN anti-torture convention.

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