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Rights under siege

Minister approves the use of information gained through torture

This morning on CBC I heard a brief news item saying that Canada has now given the OK for CSIS, Canada’s spy organization, to accept information gained through torture.

That’s all I heard so I looked on the net and found an article by the Canadian Press which was obtained through the Freedom of Information Act.

The article stated that our Harper government has turned an about-face regarding information garnered from torture. After allegations of torture being used on prisoners handed over by our military to countries that use this horrible method of gaining information, and other prominent cases in the news, our government proclaimed that we would not accept information from people who were tortured.

Now, very quietly and not widely reported, Minister of Public Safety Vic Toews gave CSIS the green light on that information and told them that the Harper government now expects the spy service to “make protection of life and property its overriding priority”. Who decides whose life and what property? Property? This is abhorrent, to say the least.

Could this reporting of government policies be the reason why several Conservative MPs have presented petitions seeking the withdrawal of funding for the CBC?

In most cases, their reason was because it gives the CBC an advantage over private-sector competitors. The MPs who put these petitions forward are: Cheryl Gallant, Colin Carrie, Rob Anders, Brian Jean, Wladyslaw Lizon and Garry Breitkreuz.

Donna Stocker

 

Cawston