Gita Hashemi on Thu, 11 Jan 2007 07:03:17 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Fwd: OPEN LETTER from HUNGER-STRIKERS at Canada's "Guantanamo |
as harper's conservatives (better known as right-wing radicals) have
been busy solidifying their parliamentary and operational powers in
canada without any effective opposition, the 'security certificate'
remains the extra-judicial measure that gives canadian government and
secret service powers similar to their u.s. counterparts. important
to note stockwell day, currently minister for border security,
formerly was the leader of the racist reform party that was folded
into the present conservative party formation. the detainees who've
written the letter below have been on hunger strike for a while. as
expected, there is almost no reflection/reporting about this in
canadian mainstream media. these men, and the 'toronto 17'
detainees, have all but been dropped from canada's dominant political
discourse that fabricates our national identity as a democratic
nation of peace-keepers!
be well.
gita
-----Original Message-----
From: Justice for Adil [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 09, 2007 12:28 PM
Subject: [securitycerts-coord] OPEN LETTER from HUNGER-STRIKERS at
Canada's "Guantanamo North"
Open Letter and Call for Action from Hungerstrikers at "Guantanamo North"
Security certificate detainees' Hunger Strike Enters Day 45 for
Mahjoub, Day 34 for Jaballah and Almrei
TAKE ACTION: SEE END OF EMAIL
JANUARY 8, 2007 -- In an open letter released today from the
detainees at Canada's Guantanamo Bay -- the Kingston Immigration
Holding Centre, located on the grounds of Millhaven Penitentiary
outside of Kingston, ON -- Mahmoud Jaballah, Mohammad Mahjoub, and
Hassan Almrei have asked the people of Canada to speak up for their
rights.
The three men have been held indefinitely, without charge or bail,
for as long as 6.5 years, on secret evidence neither they nor their
lawyers are allowed to see.
The open letter comes with the declining health of two of the men.
"I normally hear from Mr. Mahjoub every day or so, but he was so weak
that he did not call for two days, and when he finally was able to
use the phone, he reported a fever, awful headaches, chest pains,
pains in his
left arm, and overall weakness," says family friend and coordinator
of the Campaign to Stop Secret Trials in Canada, Matthew Behrens.
"Mr. Jaballah is experiencing the kind of difficulties consistent
with a lengthy hunger strike as well, in addition to ongoing pain
from a double hernia which, despite being diagnosed last April, has
yet to be scheduled for surgery."
There has not been a daily check of medical conditions of the
hunger-strikers at KIHC.
It appears increasingly that the denial of medical care is part of an
overall pattern of arbitrary decisionmaking that contributes to a
punitive atmosphere against men who are being held indefinitely
without
charge.
TEXT OF THE OPEN LETTER
Monday, January 8, 2007
Open Letter to the People of Canada from the Detainees at Canada's
Guantanamo Bay
We are writing to you because the government of Canada will not speak
with us. We are three Muslim men who have been detained under a
security certificate, without charge or bail, for between 5 and 6 and
a half years. We are not allowed to know the evidence against us.
Many groups such as Amnesty International have called security
certificates fundamentally flawed and unfair. The United Nations has
criticized Canada for this practice. Right now, the Supreme Court is
deciding what Canada should do about them.
We are held at a place called the Kingston Immigration Holding Centre
(KIHC), located on the grounds of Millhaven Penitentiary. Some people
have called this place Guantanamo Bay North. Like the detainees in
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, we are held indefinitely. This is a kind of
psychological torture that is almost unimaginable. We do not know
when, or if, we will be released from jail.
We still have many months, and possibly years, of jail before us
while our cases go through different court proceedings.
We have been very patient and done our best to deal with a process
where it is impossible to defend yourself. And we will remain
patient, because we know that ultimately, we will be let out, because
we are innocent men.
But sometimes there is only so much human beings should be required
to accept before they raise their voice in peaceful protest.
Right now we are on a liquid-only hunger strike protesting the
conditions of our detention. For Mohammad Mahjoub, it is day 45, for
Mahmoud Jaballah and Hassan Almrei, it is day 34. We do not want to
be on hunger strike. It is hard on us and our families. But it is the
only voice we have.
When we were detained in Toronto, there were many hunger strikes
protesting our conditions of detention. Because of this, the new
facility at Millhaven was built, and now we are three hours away from
our loved ones. Many of the things promised to us, such as
educational programs and a library, have not
happened. We do not have the same rights as convicted criminals to
trailer visits with our families. And now we are faced with the
denial of medical care. In one case, shots for Hepatitis C have not
been given since
September 2, 2006. Surgery for a knee injury and a double hernia have
not been scheduled, even though we have been here since April, 2006.
Our demands are very simple.
There must be a supervisor to be present with us when we move
anywhere within the facility. In particular, this is important if we
move from the living unit to the next building or to the Millhaven
building for health
care. Without a supervisor present, the possibility remains of a
guard making a false accusation against us. As we have seen too often
here, when it comes down to our word against a guard's, the staff
will side with the guards.
Medical care must be delivered to us in the living unit if we are not
accompanied by a supervisor to the administration building. We have
not refused the offer of medical care. We want medical care. Medical
care was given to us in this area before September 10, 2006, and now
our refusal to go to the administration building without a supervisor
-- a choice we have made for our own safety -- is being used as an
excuse to deny us medical care.
We would like to have access to the media without guards present
during an interview. We had private access to the media at Metro
West, without needing approval from the jail.
We want an end to daily head counts, since there are only three of
us, and they are humiliating and unnecessary.
We would like to use phone cards to call family overseas. The KIHC
makes us use the most expensive plan available, which our families
can't afford because they are on social assistance. Since calls are
monitored, it makes no sense why a cheaper calling card cannot be
used.
We want the same rights as other federal inmates: access to a
library, educational programs, and trailer visits with our families
where we can stay together for three days every month.
Our "yard" is a small concrete area. Just three metres from this is a
huge grassy area, but we are not allowed to enjoy it. It is
surrounded by two huge fences, but nobody currently uses it. We see
no reason why we cannot enjoy the outdoors.
Because problems keep happening here, we need to get at the root of
the issue: there is no independent body or neutral mediator and there
is no translator for meetings with staff (English is not our first
language). All our complaints about staff are dealt with by staff.
They are not objective, so the complaints are always dismissed, with
no appeal. This is not fair. There is no ombudsperson that we can
speak with. We have been told we can send complaints to the Red
Cross, but we are not allowed to phone them. Besides, the Red Cross
has no authority here.
Ultimately, we wish to be treated as human beings, and all human
beings have rights. We wish to be reunited with our loved ones, but
until that time comes, we want to live with as much dignity as is
possible while we are at Guantanamo North. There is no
security-related reason why this is not possible.
Our hearts cry from the suffering we see in the world, and we
ourselves try to cope day to day with lives that have been stolen
from us based on secrets. Our families are in prison, too. The
children long for us to be
home with them to play, to help with the schoolwork, to be there as
they grow up. And we know that day will hopefully come soon.
Many times before, people across this country have spoken up for our
rights, and we thank you from the bottom of our hearts. Right now, we
face a very difficult situation, and if the government will not speak
with us, we hope they will listen to you.
Please contact your Member of Parliament, write a letter to the
newspaper, and call Stockwell Day, and ask him that he fix the
problems at KIHC. The pain we feel from a lengthy hunger strike is
also felt by our families and friends, who worry so much about us.
Secret trials are a wound to Canadian democracy. Justice for our
situation can help heal that wound.
Mahmoud Jaballah
Mohammad Mahjoub
Hassan Almrei
TAKING ACTION
1. Write and Call Stockwell Day, Minister responsible for the
Canadian Border Services Agency (which runs the KIHC). Demand that he
meet immediately or appoint a neutral party to immediately resolve
the crisis at
KIHC.
Stockwell Day, MP,
House of Commons, Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
Phone: (613) 995-1702
Fax: (613) 995.1154
[email protected]
[email protected]
2. Contact the new immigration minister, Diane Finley, at (866)
496-3400. This is her Simcoe constituency office. Ask that she meet
with the families of the detainees (who have requested a meeting) and
that she also take action to meet the reasonable demands of the
detainees.
3. Write a support card to the detainees (let us know at [email protected]
if you have so we can monitor if mail is getting through): Mohammad
Mahjoub, Mahmoud Jaballah, and Hassan Almrei can be reached:
Kingston Immigration Holding Centre
c/o CSC RHQ Ontario Region
440 King Street West
PO Box 1174
Kingston, Ontario K7L 4Y8
4. Join the National Days to Close Guantanamo North and South,
January 11-15, 2007. Consider organizing a vigil in your community at
the office of an MP, CSIS, RCMP, or federal building. Events are
already being planned coast-to-coast, including at Millhaven. To join
the national day of action with a vigil or public event in your
community please contact [email protected]
5. Organise a Demonstration between January 11 - 15. Demonstrations
will be taking place from British Columbia to Nova Scotia. Demands of
the demonstrations:
1. Immediately close Kingston Immigration Holding Centre (Guantanamo Bay North)
2. Immediately release Canada's secret trial "security certificate"
detainees or provide them with a fair, transparent, open trial.
3. End all proceedings to deport the Secret Trial Five (Mahmoud
Jaballah, Mohammad Mahjoub, Hassan Almrei, Mohamed Harkat, Adil
Charkaoui)
4. Abolish security certificates and end deportation to torture.
5. Immediately condemn the illegal Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba.
CAMPAIGN TO STOP SECRET TRIALS IN CANADA - Toronto
[email protected]
tel. 416 651 5800
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