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for Abdelrazik
Listen to an audio statement from Abousfian Abdelrazik on April 1st, 2009 by clicking the play button below. You can download the MP3 here.
Speakers (left to right): Manon Perron, CSN-CCMM (hidden by camera); Philippe Robert de Massy, Ligue des droits et libertés (hidden by camera); Brian Aboud, Project Fly Home; Émilie Breton, Project Fly Home; Abousfian Abdelrazik; Paul Champ, lawyer; Khaled Elgazzar, lawyer; Sameer Zuberi, Canadian Muslim Forum (hidden by camera).
MONTREAL, 1 December 2011 – Late yesterday afternoon, the United Nation’s 1267 Committee went public with its decision to delist Abousfian Abdelrazik from its blacklist.
"It is difficult to say just how happy I am to have received this decision at last. It's like I'm dreaming: I have finally gotten back the freedom that was stolen from me," said Mr. Abdelrazik, visibly moved by the recent events, to journalists and supporters at a press conference on Thursday morning. "I want to thank everyone, across Canada and around the world, who have supported me. It was a very long struggle, years, and together we have won, from Halifax to Vancouver. Thank you to everyone," he added.
"We are so relieved that Abousfian has finally won this victory. Mr. Abdelrazik was added to the 1267 List in 2006 while he was in forced exile in Sudan and he has been fighting to be delisted ever since,” said Émilie Breton, member of Project Fly Home, a group that has supported Mr. Abdelrazik for more than three years and has opposed the 1267 sanctions regime. It is a new beginning for this man who has been through many trials."
"It's not surprising that many legal experts have referred to the 1267 regime as Kafka-esque. This kind of list should not exist. This sanctions regime is based on guilt by association and profiling and indefinitely imposes severe sanctions on individuals," said Brian Aboud, another member of Project Fly Home.
Mr. Abdelrazik first applied to be delisted in 2007, after which he was cleared by the Canadian spy agency, CSIS, as well as the RCMP. However, his request was refused and no reasons were given for the refusal; just as he has never had access to the information used against him. Under pressure of mounting criticism of the 1267 regime, the UN named an ombudsperson mandated to examine delisting request. Mr. Abdelrazik submitted a new request to be delisted to this Ombudsperson in January 2011.
“Yesterday’s decision is the product of years of struggle by Mr. Abdelrazik and his supporters. However, this struggle is not over. Abousfian is trying to hold Canadian government officials accountable for their role in his imprisonment and torture in Sudan and for whatever role they played in placing him on the 1267 List in 2006. He is still in the process of rebuilding his life and his reputation.” added Mr. Aboud.
A constitutional challenge against the Canadian legislation which implements the 1267 regime in Canada is still underway, with the International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group and the BC Civil Liberties Association as co-applicants.
As Mr. Abdelrazik stated today, he is still in process of re-establishing a "normal life", which he hopes to enjoy with his children here in Montreal. Having himself lived the direct consequences of this regime, he called for solidarity with those who are continuing to experience the unjust effects of such regimes, which violates their fundamental rights, their right to earn a living, the right to freedom and to justice.
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Press conference 1 December 2011 at 10am at 1212 Panet, Montreal to react to the good news.
Abousfian Abdelrazik submitted a delisting request to the UN 1267 Committee in January 2011 via the new Ombudsperson. He has been waiting in suspense ever since for their response. If the Committee agrees to delist him, his name will be removed from the Security Council's 1267 List and he will be freed from the sanctions (asset freeze and international travel ban) immediately.
On Monday last week (November 14th), the Ombudsperson presented her report to the Committee. It is now up to the Committee - comprised of all members of the Security Council - to make a decision. According to the regulations, the decision could come out any day now.
After three years and a half years of working in solidarity with Abdelrazik and against this unjust blacklisting regime, Project Fly Home is awaiting the decision with high expectations and hope.
Below:
Mr. Abdelrazik is 49 years old. He is a single father, raising two children by himself in Montreal. He is a machinist by profession but is not able to work due to sanctions imposed on him by Canada under a UN Security Council blacklisting regime. He was born in Sudan, but has lived in Montreal, Canada since 1990, minus six years of forced exile from 2003 to 2009. He became a Canadian citizen in 1995.
Abousfian Abdelrazik's case became a national scandal for the Harper government in 2009.
Through access to information legislation and legal cases, Mr. Abdelrazik's lawyers have gained access to confidential government memos and admissions indicating that CSIS and other Canadian officials were involved in his arrest and in blocking his return to Canada. Here are a few examples:
History and Scope. In 1999, the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 1267, which created a sanctions regime aimed at controlling suspected associates or members of the Taliban. In 2002, the list of suspects subject to sanctions was expanded to include suspected associates and members of Al Qaeda. In June 2011, following Resolution 1989, the list was divided in two: one list for the Taliban, by that time in a process of negotiation with the US and UK; and a second list (the “1267/1989 List”) for suspected associates of Al Qaeda. What follows pertains to the latter list (the “1267/1989 List”), which concerns Mr. Abdelrazik.
Impact. Individuals and entities who are listed are subject to international sanctions: 1) an asset freeze; 2) a ban on international travel; and 3) an arms embargo. The sanctions are imposed indefinitely.
Listing. The list is explicitly 'preventive'. That means that people on the list are not necessarily charged with any crime and no crime need have taken place. Instead, people are listed on the basis of alleged association. The process is as follows:
On 27 January 2010, the UK Supreme Court struck down legislation in the UK that implemented the 1267 Regime. They ruled that it violated fundamental principles of common law, such as the presumption of innocence.
On 4 March 2010, the Swiss Federal Assembly passed a resolution calling on the Swiss government to communicate to the UN Security Council that the Swiss Confederation would no longer implement the 1267 Regime if the person concerned had been on the UN list for more than three years without having been brought to justice. The resolution also recommended that the Government make clear that a democratic country based on the rule of law cannot implement a sanctions regime which suspends the most elementary of rights for years.
On 6 August 2010, the UN Special Rapporteur on the promotion of human rights while countering terrorism issued a report concluding, among other things, that the Security Council had gone beyond its mandated powers in setting up the 1267 Regime in the first place.
On 6 April 2011, eleven states - Austria, Belgium, Costa Rica, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Liechtenstein, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and Switzerland - write to the President of the Security Council, calling for fairer procedures in the 1267 Regime. Notable that Peter Wittig, the German Ambassador to the United Nations, and the Chair of the 1267 Committee at the time, was one of the co-signatories.
Canada has never charged Mr. Abdelrazik with any crime nor has it ever presented him with any clear reasons why it suspects him.
In fact, Canada submitted a delisting request to the 1267 Committee on behalf of Abdelrazik in 2007. This request was based on letters from both RCMP and CSIS effectively clearing Abdelrazik:
“Please be advised that the RCMP conducted a review of its files and was unable to locate any current and substantive information that indicates Mr. Abdelrazik is involved in criminal activity.”
-- Mike McDonell Assistant Commissioner, RCMP, letter to Foreign Affairs, 15 November 2007
CSIS “has no current substantial information regarding Mr. Abdelrazik.”
-- Jim Judd, CSIS Director, letter to Foreign Affairs, 6 November 2007.
Mr. Abdelrazik is also not on Canada's no-fly list. He took several flights across Canada in November 2010, during a union-sponsored speaking tour which brought him from Saskatoon to Vancouver.
Furthermore, earlier this year, the Canadian Permanent Mission to the UN wrote to the 1267 Ombudsperson that, “CSIS states that it has no substantive information that indicates that Mr. Abdelrazik is currently an individual associated with Al-Qaida.” (30 May 2011)
Despite these positions, the Canadian government continues to apply sanctions on Mr. Abdelrazik.
Mr. Abdelrazik has never been charged with any crime. Canadian security has admitted that it does not have evidence against him. Similarly, a Canadian government memo marked 'secret' and dated 19 July 2006, passes on a message “from senior levels of the Homeland Security Council” in the White House that, “The US had information on Abdelrazik, but at this point, it was not enough to charge him ...”
Three years after Mr. Abdelrazik's name was placed on the list, a short summary of very general allegations against him was posted on the website of the 1267 Committee. This is the only clue he has about why his name appears on the list. No evidence is provided to back up the allegations. Since some of the allegations amount to crimes in Canada, and Mr. Abdelrazik has never been charged, it is clear that evidence to support those allegations does not exist.
The allegations consist entirely of complete fabrication, possibly obtained under torture, or banal facts misinterpreted as terrorist conspiracy.
To take one example, central to the claims made against Mr. Abdelrazik: an alleged association with Abu Zubaydah. First of all, Mr. Abdelrazik denies any acquaintance with Abu Zubaydah and is at a complete loss to know why this claim is made. Secondly, even if it were true (and it is not), simple association as alleged does not constitute grounds for denying fundamental rights in international or Canadian law; on the contrary, freedom of association is itself enshrined as a fundamental right. Third, and more seriously still, it is now well-documented that Abu Zubaydah was severely tortured while in CIA custody1. It is of great concern that the United Nations is trading in torture by using this information. Finally, the United States has reversed its position on Abu Zubaydah and no longer believes that he was ever linked to Al Qaeda2. Mr. Abdelrazik seems to be in the absurd position of being listed as an Al Qaeda associate because he was - falsely - believed to have been associated with someone who is himself no longer considered to be associated with Al Qaeda.
Apart from these formal allegations, in August 2011, a secret report was leaked to media, seemingly by high level Canadian officials. Although the story made good copy, the report was evidently not taken seriously by the Canadian government itself: Canada had not provided the report to the Ombudsperson when she asked Canada for information relevant to the case; in 2007, three years after the report was written, both CSIS and RCMP said they had no information that Mr. Abdelrazik was involved in any criminal activities; Mr. Abdelrazik is not on the Canadian no-fly list; and no criminal charges have ever been laid against him. Moreover, the allegations made in the report had already been reviewed by the Federal Court which, in 2008, found them to be unsubstantiated.
Psychological impact. The psychological impact of preventive, arbitrary and indefinite detention has been studied in North America and Europe in the context of security laws3: lack of clear explanation for questions like “why me?”; the sense of powerlessness; the endlessness of the situation; and the terrorist label itself (creating a public association with the most heinous crimes) have been found to be a source of pervasive and persistent psychological stress. In the context of the 1267 Regime, the sense of impotence in the face of arbitrary power is heightened by the control exercised over financial assets, and hence over the means of livelihood.
Frozen bank account. After his return to Canada, Mr. Abdelrazik sought to re-open his bank account at the Royal Bank of Canada. The Royal Bank refused to re-activate the account on the grounds that Mr. Abdelrazik was on the 1267 List. Mr. Abdelrazik finally succeeded in opening an account at the Caisse populaire Desjardins, only to see it frozen as soon as he had deposited funds. He was unable to access his money until the government arranged an exemption under the 1267 Regime which allows him to withdraw a fixed amount every month.
Child assistance benefits. In 2011, the Quebec government denied Mr. Abdelrazik's children child assistance benefits in Quebec because his name appears on the 1267 List. After a lengthy struggle, which effectively highlighted the way in which this sanctions regime allows various authorities to exercise arbitrary control over Mr. Abelrazik's life, part of the benefits were made available to him almost a year later4.
Employment. The 1267 sanctions regime effectively guarantees unemployment and condemns Mr. Abdelrazik to a life of economic precarity. Any prospective employer would be required to ask Foreign Affairs to seek an exemption from the 1267 Committee in New York. It is highly unlikely that any employer, not already scared off by the terrorist label, would hold a job open while waiting for an exemption under these conditions.
Isolation. The Canadian regulations implementing the 1267 sanctions make it illegal for any Canadian or any person in Canada to offer a gift or loan (or salary) to Mr. Abdelrazik. Mr. Abdelrazik's friends and associates are thus vulnerable to legal action. This creates an isolating effect, particularly in his own community, whose members are additionally at risk of suspicion of “association” with someone labelled in this way.
Travel. Finally, even if it were otherwise safe for him to travel, the international travel ban effectively prevents Mr. Abdelrazik from any opportunity of visiting family outside Canada, including his aging mother in Sudan. It also rules out any possibility of moving to a country which has decided to opt out of the 1267 Regime (as Switzerland at one time considered doing).
Campaign to bring him home. Support for Mr. Abdelrazik from Canadians has been widespread andimpressive. His return to Canada was demanded by a spontaneous coalition of organizations and individualsfrom coast to coast, who wrote letters, organized rallies in support, endorsed the campaign, lobbied politiciansand risked arrest to buy a plane ticket to bring him home. All major labour unions and all three opposition partiesalso supported his return home. His return was greeted with an enthusiastic reception of supporters in Torontoand a midnight rally in Montreal.
Speaking tour. After his return, a coast-to-coast speaking tour was organized for Mr. Abdelrazik, sponsorednationally by major labour and human rights organizations and locally by dozens of groups. In the two-part tour,he spoke in 26 cities, from Halifax to Vancouver.
Delisting campaign. A concerted effort to convince Canada to stop applying the sanctions and lobby the UN toremove Mr. Abdelrazik from its list has been carried out through diverse actions and expressions: speakingevents, post-card campaign, lobby campaign, a Parliamentary hearing on the 1267 List, several rallies andmarches, and a “sanctions-busting telethon” (in which people were invited to phone in a donation to deliberatelybreak the sanctions).
Labour support. Most major labour unions and alliances in Canada joined the Just Work campaign, whichhighlighted the fact that the sanctions effectively prevented Mr. Abdelrazik from working. The labourassociations donated to a fund established by the Canadian Labour Congress in deliberate violation of the 1267Sanctions. The fund was handed over to Abdelrazik in December 2010 to pay him to document his story.Civil Society meeting with 1267 Committee. In June 2011, a delegation composed of spokespersons fromseven organizations, accompanied by journalists from the Gazette and Le Devoir, travelled to New York to meetwith 1267 Committee representatives and hand over a letter endorsed by almost 100 organizations across thecountry, calling on the Committee to remove Mr. Abdelrazik from the list. The delegation was also supported inthe US by the AFL-CIO (an umbrella group for organized labour in the US) and the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).
If Mr. Abdelrazik is removed from the list, he will be immediately free from the constraints of the sanctions.
If the 1267 Committee refuses Mr. Abdelrazik's delisting request, he will remain under sanctions indefinitely. Hecan reapply for delisting through the Ombudsperson only if he has new information to submit. However, Canadacould at any time decide to stop applying the sanctions on Mr. Abdelrazik within Canada, as it did in the case ofLiban Hussein, under a Liberal government.
Whether or not he is taken off the list, his constitutional challenge to the 1267 Regime will proceed in Canada. If Mr. Abdelrazik is taken off the list, the suit will be carried forward by the BC Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA) and the International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group (ICLMG). Read the legal motion, summarizing the charter violations.
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