Dear Prime Minister,
We are a range of organizations across Canada from many different backgrounds, including faith groups, human rights organizations, legal groups, women’s equality organizations, ethno-cultural groups, trade unions and many more. We are writing this Open Letter to you today – International Human Rights Day as well as the 30th anniversary of the adoption of the UN Convention against Torture and other forms of Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment – to urge that Canada take a long overdue step in addressing the continuing grim and harrowing crisis of torture around the world.
In December 2002, the United Nations adopted an important treaty focused on preventing torture, the Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture. Twelve years later, Canada has not yet ratified the Optional Protocol, despite having made promises to the UN Human Rights Council in 2006 and 2009 to consider doing so. We are calling on you to commit to take that step without any further delay. It is time for Canada to ratify the Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture.
We are writing to you directly Prime Minister Harper because this involves a number of different government departments, including Foreign Affairs, Public Safety, Heritage and Justice. As such, your leadership is required. We are also writing to you directly because progress towards Canadian ratification has been stalled for a number of years. Again your leadership is required.
The Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture establishes national and international systems for inspecting detention centres, all with an eye to identifying and exposing the conditions that permit and encourage torture to take place. It seeks to pierce the shroud of secrecy that allows torture to continue at such alarming rates around the world. Amnesty International has documented torture in 141 countries in the last five years.
Seventy-six countries have ratified and thus legally bound themselves to the Optional Protocol since it was adopted by the UN in December 2002. Another 19 have taken the symbolic but important first step of signing the Optional Protocol, for a total of 95 states. The list includes many of Canada’s closest allies. Six states have ratified in 2014, including two just last month.
Once Canada becomes a party to the Optional Protocol we will be able to credibly and forcefully press other countries to follow suit – countries where torture is rampant and where there are inadequate or nonexistent laws and institutions for preventing torture and monitoring detention facilities. The international community urgently needs Canada to be party to the Optional Protocol to assist in the vital effort of more universally realizing its great promise of torture prevention. Canada cannot play that role from the sidelines.
Ratification of the Optional Protocol will also strengthen oversight of detention centres in Canada in a manner that brings consistency across the country, ensuring greater coherence between detention centres that are operated by the federal government and those that are operated by provincial and territorial governments. It will also bring scrutiny to detention centres that are currently not subject to independent oversight, such as immigration detention centres operated by the Canadian Border Services Agency. Torture and ill-treatment are not rampant in Canadian detention centres and there are some complaint processes already in place. Nevertheless, the improved oversight provided through the Optional Protocol will further strengthen efforts to guard against abuses that do occur.
We are writing to you with this urgent plea today, in particular because International Human Rights Day is a day that marks important advances in the development of international human rights laws. It was on this day in 1948 that the UN adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, launching the international human rights system. Also on this day thirty years ago on 10 December 1984, the UN adopted the ground-breaking UN Convention against Torture and other forms of Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. Canada was a strong champion of and played a key role in the adoption of the Convention against Torture.
Three decades later 156 countries have ratified the Convention and bound themselves to its comprehensive framework governing the absolute and unequivocal prohibition against torture. Another ten states have taken the first step of signing the Convention. But despite having support from 166 governments, torture continues to be widespread around the world. That is why it is of such urgent importance for the Convention’s Optional Protocol, with its focus on torture prevention, to gain wider international support. We are looking to Canada to play a lead role in that effort.
Canada needs to ratify the Optional Protocol for the fundamentally important reason that preventing torture anywhere and everywhere, globally, is of concern to Canadians. As the multicultural diversity of Canada continues to grow it is a particularly serious preoccupation for the increasing number of Canadians who worry about the safety of family and friends who live in other countries where the risk of torture and ill-treatment is very high.
Canada needs to ratify the Optional Protocol as well because in an increasingly inter-connected world, more and more Canadians have experienced or have been at serious risk of being tortured in a growing list of countries – countries without the oversight and monitoring that would help prevent torture in the first place. That list includes China, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Syria, none of which have yet signed or ratified the Optional Protocol. Canadian ratification would strengthen our ability to press those countries to ratify and open their detention centres to increased scrutiny. That would help to prevent torture and to keep Canadians safe.
Prime Minister, when your government stood for election to the UN Human Rights Council in 2006 you pledged to consider ratifying the Optional Protocol if elected. Canada was elected and served a three year term but did not ratify. When Canada’s human rights record was reviewed for the first time under the UN Human Rights Council’s Universal Periodic Review process in 2009 your government again promised to consider ratifying the Optional Protocol, in response from recommendations to do so from many other governments. Again that did not happen.
We were disappointed, therefore, that when Canada was reviewed for the second time under the Universal Periodic Review, in 2013, the government simply stated that there are no plans to ratify at this time, despite the fact that this was one of the most frequently repeated recommendations directed at Canada, often from close allies.
Prime Minister, your officials have done the work to lay the ground for Canada to ratify. They have identified changes that might be needed to Canadian law, policy or practice. None are daunting; all are feasible. It is time to engage provincial and territorial governments in a discussion and bring them on board so that ratification can go ahead expeditiously. It is about leadership. It is about political will. And as the world marks the 30th anniversary of the Convention against Torture against a tragic and disappointing backdrop of a continuing worldwide torture crisis; it is about stepping up and getting it done.
We look forward to news that Canada has ratified the Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture before the 31st anniversary of the Convention comes around on 10 December 2015. We urge you to commit to that goal.
Sincerely,
Alex Neve, Secretary General, Amnesty International Canada (English branch)
Béatrice Vaugrante, Directrice Générale, Amnistie internationale Canada francophone
Regional Chief Cameron Alexis and Regional Chief Morley Googoo, Assembly of First Nations
Pascal Paradis, Directeur général, Avocats sans frontières Canada
Carmen Cheung, Senior Counsel, British Columbia Civil Liberties Association
Carole Samdup, Executive Director, Canada Tibet Committee
Leilani Farha, Executive Director, Canada without Poverty
Kim Pate, Executive Director, Canadian Association of Elizabeth Fry Societies (CAEFS)
Mitchell Goldberg, President, Canadian Association of Refugee Lawyers
David Robinson, Executive Director, Canadian Association of University Teachers
Mulugeta Abai, Executive Director, Canadian Centre for Victims of Torture
Sukanya Pillay, Executive Director and General Counsel Canadian Civil Liberties Association
Julia Sánchez, President-CEO, Canadian Council for International Cooperation
Loly Rico, President, Canadian Council for Refugees
Lana Robinson, Clerk, Canadian Friends Service Committee (Quakers)
Hassan Yussuff, President, Canadian Labour Congress
Brittany Twiss, Executive Director, Canadian Lawyers Abroad
Christine Jones, Co-Chair, Canadian Peace Alliance
David Poopalapillai, National Spokesperson, Canadian Tamil Congress
Joe Gunn, Executive Director, Citizens for Public Justice
Rick Goldman, Coordinator, Committee to Aid Refugees
Maude Barlow, National Chairperson, Council of Canadians
Ian Hamilton, Executive Director, Equitas
Alice Huynh, Chair, Falun Gong Human Rights Working Group
Joanna Kerr, Executive Director, Greenpeace Canada
Roy Culpeper, Chair, Group of 78
Sarah Hipworth, Organizer, Hamilton Coalition to Stop the War
Jasmine Herlt, Director, Human Rights Watch Canada
Roch Tassé, National Coordinator, International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group
Kevin Malseed, Program Manager, Inter Pares
Jennifer Henry, Executive Director, KAIROS: Canadian Ecumenical Justice Initiatives
Steven Sagle, Chair, Law Union of Ontario
Betty Plewes, Coordinator, The McLeod Group
Ihsaan Gardee, Executive Director, National Council of Canadian Muslims
James Clancy, National President, National Union of Public and General Employees
Claudette Dumont-Smith, Executive Director, Native Women’s Association of Canada
Katrina Pacey, Executive Director, Pivot Legal Society
Peggy Mason, President, Rideau Institute on International Affairs.
Sr. Veronica O’Reilly csj, Congregational Leader, Congregation of the Sisters of St. Joseph in Canada
Debbie Hill-Corrigan, Executive Director, Sojourn House
Urgyen Badheytsang, National Director, Students for a Free Tibet Canada
Jerry Dias, National President, Unifor
Kate White, President & CEO, United Nations Association in Canada
Patti Talbot, Acting Executive Minister, Church in Mission Unit The United Church of Canada
Fannie Lafontaine et Julia Grignon , Co-directrices, Clinique de droit international pénal et humanitaire Université Laval
Professor John Packer, Director, Human Rights Research and Education Centre University of Ottawa
Renu J. Mandhane, Director, International Human Rights Program University of Toronto Faculty of Law
Kayum Masimov, President, Uyghur Canadian Society
Kasari Govender, Executive Director, West Coast LEAF
Diane O’Reggio, Executive Director, Women’s Legal Education and Action Fund (LEAF)
Hon. Warren Allmand, President World Federalist Movement – Canada