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Canada

USA: In whose best interests? Omar Khadr, child ‘enemy combatant ...
16 April 2008

This is a summary of the report about Omar Khadr, a Canadian national, who has been in US military detention for approaching six years. Taken into custody in July ...

Report       AMR 51/029/2008

USA: In whose best interests? Omar Khadr, child ‘enemy combatant ...
16 April 2008

Omar Khadr, a Canadian national, has been in US military detention for approaching six years. Taken into custody in July 2002 when he was 15 years old, he is now ...

Report       AMR 51/028/2008

Long overdue, not ‘premature’: Canada must pursue Omar Khadr ...
16 April 2008

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL. PUBLIC STATEMENT. AI Index: AMR 20/001/2008 (Public). Date: 16 April 2008. Long overdue, not ‘premature’: Canada ...

Document       AMR 20/001/2008

Breakthrough in Canadian Indigenous rights flashpoint | Amnesty ...
14 March 2008

An Indigenous Canadian community’s longstanding campaign to stopclear-cut logging on its land has prompted a multinational papercompany to stop buying wood fibre ...

Story      

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights resigns | Amnesty ...
10 March 2008

Louise Arbour has confirmed that she is to resign from her position as United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.

Story      

Le Fil d'AI. Mars 2008
6 March 2008

Newsletter       NWS 21/002/2008

The Wire, March 2008. Vol. 38, No. 2
6 March 2008

The Wire, March 2008. Vol. 38, No. 2. 1) Stolen childhood, lost learning 2) Women act against repression in Iran 3) Women unite to ...

Newsletter       NWS 21/002/2008

Video: Worldwide actions to close Guantánamo | Amnesty ...
18 January 2008

›Contact Us; ›Campaigns; ›Library; ›For Media. Logo Skip to main content. اللغة العربية; Français; Español. Register ...

Video Clip      

The world shouts 'Close Guantánamo' | Amnesty International
16 January 2008

Thousands join worldwide protests marking the sixth anniversary of the first transfers of detainees to Guantánamo on 11 January.

Story      

Canada: Amnesty International reiterates call to suspend police ...
16 November 2007

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL. Public Statement. AI Index: AMR 20/004/2007 (Public). News Service No: 223. 16 November 2007. Canada: Amnesty ...

Press Release       AMR 20/004/2007

Taken from the Amnesty International Report 2007

Head of state: Queen Elizabeth II, represented by Governor General Michaëlle Jean
Head of government: Stephen Harper (replaced Paul Martin in January)
Death penalty: abolitionist for all crimes
International Criminal Court: ratified

There were concerns about violations of the rights of Indigenous peoples, including discrimination and violence against Indigenous women and girls. Counter-terrorism laws and practices were inconsistent with human rights standards.

The rights of Indigenous peoples

There was no comprehensive national strategy to address continuing discrimination and violence against Indigenous women. The policies and practices of police forces in response to such violence were inconsistent.

There was no progress in resolving the long-standing land dispute with the Lubicon Cree in Alberta, despite calls by the UN Human Rights Committee on Canada in 1990 and 2005 to make every effort to resolve the issue.

There were concerns that the approach to child protection for Indigenous children was discriminatory, both in the levels of funding provided and in the disproportionately high levels of Indigenous children taken into care.

Women's human rights

In September there was a substantial cut in the budget of Status of Women Canada, the federal government agency responsible for promoting gender equality. New restrictions barred advocacy activities by organizations receiving funding from the agency.

There was no progress in implementing recommendations made by a 1996 public inquiry, a 2003 Canadian Human Rights Commission report, and the UN Human Rights Committee in 2005 that there be an independent agency established to receive complaints from women prisoners held in federal detention facilities.

Police abuses

Concerns about excessive use of force involving taser guns continued. In August, Jason Doan died in Red Deer, Alberta, after being subdued by police using a taser, bringing the number of such deaths to 15 since April 2003.

Security and human rights

Three Muslim men subject to security certificates issued under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act remained in detention and two others were under strict bail conditions. The men faced a serious risk of torture if deported. Appeals to the Supreme Court of Canada in three of the cases were pending at the end of the year.

In September and December, two reports from a public inquiry into Canada's role in the case of Maher Arar were released. He had been deported to Syria in 2002 where he was detained without charge for a year and tortured. The first report cleared Maher Arar, recommended compensation and proposed numerous reforms. In December, the government announced an inquiry into the cases of three other dual Canadian nationals tortured abroad: Abdullah Almalki, Ahmad Abou El-Maati and Muyyed Nureddin.

In October, a parliamentary committee recommended that the preventative and investigative hearing provisions of the 2001 Anti-Terrorism Act be renewed for five years.

Canadian forces in Afghanistan transferred detainees to Afghan officials in circumstances where there was a serious risk of torture and ill-treatment.

Refugee protection

The new government refused to implement the provisions of the 2001 Immigration and Refugee Protection Act establishing a Refugee Appeal Division.

A legal challenge was lodged to the Canada/USA "safe third country" agreement. Under the agreement most refugee claimants arriving in Canada via the USA were required to make their refugee claims in the USA, where there were concerns that some faced human rights violations. The court hearing was expected to begin in February 2007.

Immigration laws failed to provide an absolute ban on deporting individuals to countries where they faced a serious risk of torture. In October, a Federal Court judge ruled that "exceptional circumstances" did not exist to justify the deportation of Mahmoud Jaballah to Egypt, where he was at risk of being tortured.