PygmyPlaidGiraffe
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2003
- Messages
- 1,253
Arar is expecting the inquiry into his case to answer a long list of questions, all focused on how Canadian officials were involved in his ordeal.
Lorne Waldman, Arar's lawyer, says "the public information that has been made available to date raises the very grave and serious question of whether the Canadian government, and in particular the Canadian security services, are involved in contracting out torture, in violation of Canadian and international law."
The answers may be contained in some of the thousands of pages of documents the commission has sought from 10 government departments and agencies, including the RCMP and the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS).
But Marlys Edwardh, Arar's co-counsel, says her client may never see most of those documents.
"Certainly we have been told there is a large body of documentation that the government of Canada does not wish to put into the public domain. Obviously we haven't seen it."
The government of Canada can ask the inquiry's commissioner, Justice Dennis O'Connor, to declare any evidence secret on the grounds its publication could harm national security, national defence or international relations.
O'Connor will make those decisions in secret, at times with only government lawyers present.
"We have taken the position that we do not agree Mr. Arar needs to be present, or his counsel need to be present, that the interests necessary can be addressed by commission counsel," said Barbara McIntire...
rikzilla said:
Why yes, indeed I do! That is if by arbitrary you mean capturing them in a war zone shooting at US soldiers. Zep, be reasonable for one moment if you can. Arbitrary would be jacking some poor Aussie tourist who's out on the town.
The fact that one of the australians was kidnapped in pakistan...nowhere near any combat zone is a fact you are happy to place in the "facts that must be ignored" box. Why do you do it rick? Is it due to ignorance or dishonesty?
Many of your fellow citizens have sacrificed a lot to enshrine basic principles of freedom that usefull idiots like you allow people like bush to throw in the gutter...
[/B]
rikzilla said:
Why yes, indeed I do! That is if by arbitrary you mean capturing them in a war zone shooting at US soldiers. Zep, be reasonable for one moment if you can. Arbitrary would be jacking some poor Aussie tourist who's out on the town.
If people wish to become terrorists, or serve as ununiformed soldiers for outlaw regimes, they know that they are acting outside the accepted rules of war. This is unconventional warfare, and they are not protected by any international laws or conventions. Guess what Zep? Terrorists are not soldiers. Terrorists are not criminals either, they perpetuate acts of war. They inhabit a niche between soldier and criminal. Since they are both, and neither, their handling has been...in a word...innovative.
You are also wrong about this and this
As a matter of fact, the vast majority of Australians do not seem to care about these people. Tell you what, if Australia captures Americans on a battlefield in the same manner as these creeps were caught, they can do as they like with them as far as I am concerned.
-z
posted by AUP
I have said it before, they may be guilty as hell of something.
Almalki and Elmaati both knew Arar and, like him, they've been investigated by the RCMP and the Canadian Security Intelligence Service.
Elmaati's lawyer, Rocco Galatti, made his case Friday in a teleconference.
"The facts of Mr. Elmaati's detention, his torture, his divulgence of Mr. Almalki and Mr. Arar, which later led to their own arrest and detention by the Syrians are intertwined," he said.
rikzilla said:Why yes, indeed I do! That is if by arbitrary you mean capturing them in a war zone shooting at US soldiers. Zep, be reasonable for one moment if you can. Arbitrary would be jacking some poor Aussie tourist who's out on the town.
corplinx said:
Can you point me to anyone who thinks David Koresh was a hero? I for one have never seen Koresh lionized but instead Janet Reno/Bill Clinton demonized.
Dancing David said:...
Why is it okay to subvert the constitution of the US?
Dancing David said:
Why is it okay to subvert the constitution of the US?
LostAngeles said:
Because we are at war. We did want this war. It was brought to us by swarthy, turbaned men in the wee hours of the morning of September the Elventh©. It was brought to us by an ee-vil dictator. Whom we have now deposed and will deliver into the hands of those he oppressed for justice. (pause for applause) So we will fight it. And we will win. (pause for applause) We will win because God has told me that we shall. He has told me that he has smiled upon this great land of ours and that his hand will be with us to smite the terrorists.
And other stuff Dubya would say/has said.
There were two, King Khalid, son of King Abdul Aziz and King Fahd.PygmyPlaidGiraffe said:Which ee-vil dictator brought you September Eleventh?
PygmyPlaidGiraffe said:
Which ee-vil dictator brought you September Eleventh?
LostAngeles said:
Because we are at war. We did want this war. It was brought to us by swarthy, turbaned men in the wee hours of the morning of September the Elventh©. It was brought to us by an ee-vil dictator. Whom we have now deposed and will deliver into the hands of those he oppressed for justice. (pause for applause) So we will fight it. And we will win. (pause for applause) We will win because God has told me that we shall. He has told me that he has smiled upon this great land of ours and that his hand will be with us to smite the terrorists.
And other stuff Dubya would say/has said.

-Alex Neve of Amnesty International