Canada's Schutzstaffel - Harper's Praetorian Guard
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By Carl Bronski, with Axis of Logic commentary
World Socialist Web SIte
Tuesday, Aug 24, 2010
A
boatload of people fleeing from Sri Lanka landed on Canada’s west coast earlier
this month, after several months at sea. They had been turned away by
Australia, and finally ended up here. They are (presumably) all Tamils, and in
the press they are described variously as refugees, asylum seekers, queue jumpers
– and they are mostly described as unwelcome. So much for Canada’s vaunted
reputation as a haven for the oppressed and victimized.
Sri
Lanka has experienced a nasty civil war for many years, with the Tamils finally
losing, so there is not much reason to believe that life in Sri Lanka is very
good for these folks. I have no idea who these 493 people are, whether they
have legitimate refugee claims, or if they have simply chartered passage on a
boat owned by some unscrupulous ‘immigration consultant’. Canada has a system
in place for sorting this out and, despite its critics, the system seems to
work reasonably well.
The
thing that puzzles me so much, though, is why – of all the places on Earth –
they chose to come to a country where society is disintegrating to the point
that it may begin to seem pretty familiar to the Tamils. Although Canadian
society in general appears to have missed what’s going on under its collective
nose, the following article by Carl Bronski is spot on.
So
welcome, Tamils. I hope you don’t regret where you’ve ended up.
The Conservative
government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper is seeking to silence criticism of
its right-wing policy agenda by purging high-level critics within Canada’s
public service and allied agencies and institutions.
The Ombudsman of the
Veterans Affairs Department, retired Colonel Pat Stogran, called a news
conference August 17 to denounce the department for using him merely as “window
dressing” for an “obstructive and deceptive bureaucracy.” “I can’t get inside
the system,” complained Stogran.
Earlier it had been
announced that the colonel’s three-year term will not be renewed when it
expires in November. Stogran, a former Canadian Armed Forces commander in
Afghanistan and a solid pillar of the Canadian military establishment, had
drawn the ire of senior civil servants and members of the Harper government for
pursuing disputed claims on behalf of wounded and retired veterans.
Stogran vowed to use
his last three months in office to alert veterans and the public to “how bad so
many of you are treated.” The ombudsman had advocated better pensions, services
and benefits for veterans, particularly those physically and psychologically
disabled due to their tours of duty in the armed forces. He had denounced as
inadequate the “New Veterans Charter” that had been approved by all parties in
2005 under the Liberal government of Paul Martin.
Stogran also had
criticised the department for being more an “insurance board” than a body to
look after veterans. “I was told by a senior Treasury Board analyst, who shall
remain nameless, that it is in the government’s best interest to have soldiers
killed overseas rather than wounded because the liability is shorter term,”
said Stogran.
In another purge of a
government critic, the day after Stogran’s press conference, the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police (RCMP) announced that RCMP Superintendent Marty Cheliak was
being stripped of his position as director-general of the police force’s
Canadian Firearms Program. In opposition to the policy of Harper’s
Conservatives, Cheliak championed the country’s gun registry program, creating
a coalition of police associations to oppose abandoning the current arms
control regime.
The Conservatives
railed against the gun registry when in opposition and a vote is expected to
take place this fall on a Conservative back-bencher’s “private member’s” bill
that would abolish the registry. Cheliak was removed only days before he was to
give a report to the Canadian Association of Chief’s of Police that strongly
backed the registry. But prior to his departure for the conference, a terse
RCMP statement announced that the superintendant had been removed from his
position, ostensibly because the post for which he was vetted and hired almost
a year ago is “bilingual” and Cheliak is not.
In response to a media
and opposition outcry over Cheliak’s demotion, Prime Minister Harper insisted
that the decision to replace him was taken by the RCMP high command. “The
RCMP,” he declared, “makes its own decisions with respect to its personnel.
This is not a political issue.”
But few were
convinced. Last week a spate of articles appeared in the mainstream press that
observed that there appears to be a government “hit list,” however informal,
that targets those senior public officials who in one way or another, chafe
under the agenda of the right-wing Harper government. Typical was a front-page
comment in last Thursday’s Ottawa Citizen titled “Harper’s growing
‘black list’ a threat to democracy: critics.”
Under the
parliamentary system, it is expected that senior civil servants—who in any case
attain their positions through loyal service to the state—provide “free and
fearless” advice to their political masters prior to the implementation of any
piece of legislation or major policy decision. Even greater leeway is accorded
to those serving in various “watchdog” positions or agencies whose explicit
function is to serve as an advocate for the public.
The Harper
government’s readiness to punish those who dare to criticize its actions has unnerved
broad layers of the civil service and rattled sections of the elite. They fear
that blatant government purges will weaken the Canadian state by encouraging a
culture of toadyism within the bureaucracy and by discrediting the political
system.
The case of former
Statistics Canada chief, Munir Sheikh, has been cited by opposition critics as
clear evidence of the Harper government’s mistreatment of its senior civil
servants. Last June the government announced that it was scrapping Canada’s
“long-form census” requirement. Previously, each decennial census, a small
cross-section of the population has been required to fill out a long-form
census questionnaire that provides more detailed socio-economic and geographic
data.
Information gleaned
from the long-form census has long served as a tool for those pressing for the
maintenance and expansion of public services. The Harper government’s attack on
this self-evidently valuable scientific tool—made in the name of protecting the
citizenry from state intrusion—has been opposed by many quarters within
Canadian society, including a vast number of academic, professional, and
business organizations.
However, behind the
back of the Statistics Canada Department, Industry Minister Tony Clement
manoeuvred not only to end the long form census, but to claim that the change
had the support of Munir Sheikh. The department chief vigorously opposed this
interpretation, telling a House of Commons committee that Clement’s moves,
“cast doubt on the integrity of the agency…and I, as head of that agency cannot
survive in that job.” Sheikh submitted his resignation shortly thereafter.
There is no shortage
of other recent examples to show that the Conservative government is seeking to
force out senior officials who don’t fully subscribe to its reactionary agenda.
In 2008, Linda Keen
was fired as head of the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CSNC) because she
refused to submit to pressure from the Conservative Minister of Natural
Resources, Gary Lunn, and allow Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd.’s nuclear research
station in Chalk River, Ontario to be immediately put back on line. This
antiquated station, opened more than fifty years ago, had been shut down by the
CNSC after a routine inspection established that a necessary security modification,
ordered 17 months before, had never been completed.
Keen declared that
operation of the Chalk River nuclear facility without the necessary security
system was 1,000 times more dangerous than the safety standard that the
commission normally enforces. With Keen and her commission refusing to buckle
in the face of government pressure to allow the Chalk River facility to reopen
without the long-ordered safety changes, Conservative Prime Minister Stephen
Harper publicly proclaimed that there was no safety risk, branded Keen as a
“Liberal partisan,” and summarily fired her.
More recently, the
Harper government responded to testimony by Richard Colvin, a high-level
diplomat implicating it and the Canadian military in the torture of Afghan
detainees with a campaign of lies, slander, and half-truths. Colvin, who served
in Afghanistan for 17 months in 2006-7 and was now posted as an intelligence
officer at Canada’s US embassy, told a parliamentary committee last November
that his superiors ignored his repeated warnings that the prisoners whom the
Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) transferred to Afghan security forces were subject
to abuse and torture.
Colvin further
testified that most of those whom Canada’s military captured and turned over
for interrogation by Afghanistan’s notorious secret police, the National
Directorate of Security (NDS), were not Taliban fighters, but rather ordinary
Afghans who had the misfortune of being caught up in CAF sweeps. Subsequently,
the government tried to obstruct and silence him, vilifying him to such an
extent that his career within the diplomatic core was all but dead-ended.
Shortly after Colvin’s
testimony, the contract of Peter Tinsley, the Chairman of the Military Police
Complaints Commission, was not renewed. In defiance of the government, which
claimed his Commission did not have jurisdiction, Tinsley had ordered hearings
into the CAF’s treatment of Afghan detainees.
He subsequently
accused the government of creating a “chilling effect” on officially appointed
watchdog bodies. That same month, Paul Kennedy, chair of the Commission for
Public Complaints Against the RCMP, was told that his contract would not be
renewed after he had filed several scathing reports exposing RCMP misconduct.
Then there is the case
of Rights and Democracy, a semi-autonomous, government-created and –funded
agency whose ostensible purpose is to promote democracy and human rights
overseas. The agency was plunged into turmoil, when the Harper government
appointed several ardent pro-Zionists to its board of directors, and the new
appointees succeeded in forcing through a motion to cut off funding to several
organizations based in either Israel or the Palestinian Authority that had
criticized Israeli government policy.
Two hours after an
acrimonious board meeting last January that was punctuated by accusations from
the new board members that the agency was funding pro-terrorist groups, Rights
and Democracy’s president, Remy Beauregard, suffered a fatal heart attack. The
government promptly replaced him with one of its own, Gerard Latulippe. A
former candidate of the rightwing populist Canadian Alliance, Latulippe
publicly promoted the furor over the “accommodation” of minorities in Quebec,
declaring in 2007 that he was alarmed over the “hyper concentration” of Muslims
and immigrants in Montreal.
The mainstream press
has duly reported these and other instances of the Conservatives’ victimization
of government critics and various editorial writers and columnists have voiced
concern over their impact.
Yet they refuse to
draw any connection between these events and other instances of the Harper
government using authoritarian methods—most importantly its shutting down of
parliament itself in 2008 and 2009.
Twice in little over a
year the Conservative government prorogued parliament in an attempt to
extricate itself from political difficulties. For two months, starting last
December 30, the Conservatives shut down parliament so as to derail a
parliamentary inquiry into the Afghan detain issue that risked exposing the
Canadian state’s complicity in torture. Even more ominously, in December 2008,
Harper, through the office of the un-elected and unaccountable Governor-General
and with the overwhelming support of Canada’s corporate elite, carried out a
veritable constitutional coup. In flagrant violation of democratic norms and
parliamentary convention, the minority Conservatives shut down parliament so as
to prevent the opposition from exercising its constitutional right to defeat
them in an impending non-confidence vote.
The authoritarian
measures taken at that time, along with the recent moves to silence critics
within the ranks of the state bureaucracy are just the tip of the iceberg. If
the government is willing to use such heavy-handed tactics against the loyal
parliamentary opposition and the highly paid members of the civil service
establishment, what does it have in store for workers and youth who
increasingly are coming into open conflict with the austerity policies of all
the major political parties? Those citizens who happened to be in the vicinity
of downtown Toronto during the violent police attacks, illegal searches and
detentions at the G20 this past June, saw first hand how little regard
government at all levels have for basic democratic rights.
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