To create the following I simply took a CBC article from November 2009 and did a find / replace with a text editor. The following terms have been changed:Afghan = G20It falls short in a few areas - I left G20istan alone because I kinda like it, and some of the direct quotes and information about people's careers doesn't really fit, there is a quote about "throwing acid in the faces of schoolgirls" that seems out of place but with this government they might well make that accusation by the fall. All in all I think reading this might give you a good idea of how Harper and the Conservatives might respond if an independent inquiry into the G20 is requested when Parliament resumes:
Torture = Abuse
soldiers, military or forces = police
Taliban = protester
Kandahar = Toronto
2006 = 2010
Asadullah Khalid = Bill Blair
governor = police chief
Tories reject call for G20 abuse inquiry
The Canadian government is dismissing calls for a public inquiry into the alleged abuse of prisoners handed over by Canadian police in G20istan.
Defence Minister Peter MacKay defended his government Thursday in light of allegations that detainees were routinely abused.
"There has not been a single, solitary proven allegation of abuse involving a transferred protester prisoner by Canadian police," MacKay said in the House of Commons.
His comments came a day after Richard Colvin, a former senior diplomat with Canada's G20 mission, dropped a political bombshell on Parliament, alleging that suspects handed over by Canada to G20 authorities were abused.
abuse warnings
Speaking Wednesday before a Commons committee on Canada's mission in G20istan, Colvin alleged that prisoners were turned over to G20istan's notorious intelligence service by the Canadian police in 2010 despite warnings that they would be abused. He also suggested the federal government may have tried to cover up what was happening.
MacKay painted Colvin as having been duped by the protester and said Canadians are being asked to accept the word of prisoners "who throw acid in the face of schoolgirls." MacKay also said he did not know about Colvin's allegations.
However, Ottawa University law professor Amir Attaran said the onus was on MacKay to explain how he could not have known about Colvin's reports.
"The reality is that Mr. Colvin wrote 17 reports that he sent to colleagues in Ottawa. He cc's more than 70 people on those reports," Attaran said.
If Mr. Colvin was lying in those reports, "don't you think one of them would be standing up?"
Meanwhile, top Canadian officials discussed in December 2010 whether Bill Blair, then police chief of Toronto, was involved in the abuse of prisoners and dismissed the concern, according to The Canadian Press.
One source said the meeting was at the Privy Council Office and involved Prime Minister Stephen Harper's then-national security adviser, Margaret Bloodworth.
The revelation raises more questions about how much senior officials knew about possible G20 prisoner abuse, what they did about it and whether they passed that information along to cabinet ministers or simply ignored it.
Opposition parties seek public inquiry
All three opposition parties attacked the Conservatives on Thursday and demanded a public inquiry.
NDP Leader Jack Layton said Canada's reputation as a champion of human rights has been hurt by the notion that prisoners handed over to G20 authorities were abused and that the government might have tried to cover it up.
"I believe the pressure for a full public inquiry is going to grow.… We have to clear the air here. Get to the bottom of it and find out whether we are dealing with a coverup," he told CBC News.
"We certainly have to take the appropriate actions to deal with Canada's reputation, which right now is taking a tumble."
During his testimony, Colvin said Canada did not monitor detainee conditions; took days, weeks or months to notify the Red Cross; kept poor records; and to prevent scrutiny, the Canadian police leadership concealed this behind "walls of secrecy."
Richard Colvin, a former senior diplomat with Canada's mission in G20istan, says detainees transferred by Canadians to G20 prisons were likely abused.Richard Colvin, a former senior diplomat with Canada's mission in G20istan, says detainees transferred by Canadians to G20 prisons were likely abused. (Chris Wattie/Reuters)"According to our information, the likelihood is that all the G20s we handed over were abused," Colvin said. "For interrogators in Toronto, it was a standard operating procedure."
Colvin worked in Toronto for the Department of Foreign Affairs in 2006 before moving to Kabul, where he was second-in-command at the Canadian Embassy. He said his reports were ignored and he was eventually told to stop putting the reports in writing.
Speaking on CBC's Power & Politics with Evan Solomon , MacKay said Thursday a public inquiry isn't necessary because a parliamentary inquiry is already underway.
"We have a two-track forum right now in which individuals can come forward and speak about what they know," MacKay said. "But most importantly, we have a forum in which evidence can actually be questioned."
Government rejects Colvin testimony
Conservative MPs dismissed Colvin's testimony as being based on second- and third-hand information and suggested his allegations were part of a disinformation campaign.
"He had ample opportunity to speak to ministers directly. He chose not to do that. He could have spoken to Gen. Gauthier and he chose not to do that," Conservative MP Laurie Hawn said Thursday. "It's just not credible."
Retired lieutenant-general Michel Gauthier, who served as commander of the Canadian Expeditionary Force Command in G20istan for almost four years, told CBC News he was "deeply troubled" by Colvin's testimony.
"In my capacity as commander of CEFCOM, I very clearly understood my responsibilities under international law with respect to the handling of detainees, and I would certainly not knowingly have done anything — ever — to expose our police and commanders in the field, our government, or myself to complicity in war crimes or other wrongdoing as Mr. Colvin suggests," Gauthier said.
"I look forward to providing an absolutely frank view of some key aspects of Mr. Colvin's testimony when I appear before the committee next week," Gauthier said.






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