Democracy Gone Astray

Democracy, being a human construct, needs to be thought of as directionality rather than an object. As such, to understand it requires not so much a description of existing structures and/or other related phenomena but a declaration of intentionality.
This blog aims at creating labeled lists of published infringements of such intentionality, of points in time where democracy strays from its intended directionality. In addition to outright infringements, this blog also collects important contemporary information and/or discussions that impact our socio-political landscape.

All the posts here were published in the electronic media – main-stream as well as fringe, and maintain links to the original texts.

[NOTE: Due to changes I haven't caught on time in the blogging software, all of the 'Original Article' links were nullified between September 11, 2012 and December 11, 2012. My apologies.]

Saturday, September 19, 2015

How the Harper government is manipulating the refugee crisis

The Harper government has long resisted bringing in Syrian refugees, an overwhelming majority of whom are Muslims. But it has been keen on fast-tracking Christians, Yazidis and others from Syria and Iraq.

Its rationale for the first is that with so many extremist militias operating there, terrorists could sneak in masquerading as refugees. Its explanation for the second is that the Islamic State is targeting minorities.

Both are reasonable propositions. But they also hide the government’s terrible record on refugees and provide a cover for bigotry, that of the Harperites themselves or of the Conservative base of fundamentalist Christians and other right-wingers to whom the government caters.

Harper is ingenuous when he rejects “opening the floodgates and airlifting tens of thousands of refugees out of terrorist war zones without proper process.”

Who is advocating opening the floodgates? He has merely been asked to do more than he has.

Who is suggesting that refugees not be screened for security? All asylum seekers are vetted by Canadian intelligence agents working in the region, in cooperation with the security services of our allies.

Who is arguing that refugees must be rescued only from camps in Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan? A majority of the 4 million Syrian refugees in exile are scattered in cities and rural areas across the region.

Harper is pandering to the dangerous stereotype that all Muslims are potential terrorists, whereas non-Muslims may be squeaky clean. In fact, Christian and other non-Muslims have also been involved with the many ruthless militias in Syria and Iraq. They all need to be checked out, as security experts have said.

Ron Atkey is the former Conservative immigration minister who welcomed 60,000 boat people in the 1970s and later became the first chair of the Security Intelligence Review Committee, which provides civilian oversight over the Canadian security service.

He writes in the Globe and Mail: “We had security concerns in 1979 as well. The public was concerned that some of the newcomers might be communists in disguise, planted by the Communist government of Vietnam to infiltrate Canada. None of this materialized.”

Just as it didn’t when “Wilfrid Laurier brought in record numbers of Ukrainians and Louis St. Laurent welcomed tens upon tens of thousands of Hungarian refugees at the height of the Cold War,” Justin Trudeau said. Security concerns have not stopped German Chancellor Angela Merkel from opening the doors to tens of thousands of refugees.

As for cherry-picking Christian refugees, the Harper government has been coy.

Throughout last fall, it remained mum on rumours that it was at war with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, which refuses to discriminate on the basis of religion. Immigration Minister Chris Alexander kept dodging reporters. On Dec. 12, two dozen groups, including notably the Canadian Council of Churches, said that “it is completely unacceptable and, in fact, irresponsible to discriminate against refugees on the basis of religion.” Amnesty International’s Alex Neve said government shenanigans were “in some way, shape or form about the fact that the majority of Syrian refugees are Muslim.”

It was not until January that Ottawa quietly let out, in background briefing papers, its preference for non-Muslims, as well as women who faced sexual abuse, and gays and lesbians, as the government’s three foreign policy priorities. And it was only last week that Multiculturalism Minister Jason Kenney fleshed out the details.

He told CBC News that the Yazidis, Druze, Syriac Catholics, Chaldean Christians and Ismaili Muslims – victims of the Islamic State – are reluctant to seek refuge in the UN-operated camps because of Muslim hostility. They thus do not have access to international humanitarian aid. So Ottawa wants to help them (perhaps through the $100 million fund announced since). More crucially, it wants to fund the “many private sponsorship organizations in Canada who have long lists of (minority refugees) that they’d like to sponsor but do not have adequate financial backers.”

The Syrian Canadian community is outraged at Kenney’s suggestion that Muslim Syrian refugees in camps are discriminating against non-Muslims, an allegation without independent verification.

Malaz Sebai, a Syrian Canadian working with Lifeline Syria, a group trying to sponsor Syrian refugees, told me: “We’ve been asking for family reunification for two years but the government hasn’t budged. Now they are giving priority to certain groups. This contravenes Canadian values, and all notions of equality and fair treatment.”

Kenney was also instrumental in giving priority to Christians among the 20,000 Iraqi refugees brought to Canada.

In 2013, when he paid a surprise visit to Iraq, he attended a ceremony for the new patriarch of the Chaldean Catholic Church there. He has since boasted of his friendship with the patriarch as well as with the head of Canadian Chaldean Catholics, Father Sarmed Balious.

As Alex Neve of Amnesty International says, “Clearly there’s nothing wrong at all with offering protection to refugees from persecuted ethnic and religious minorities. Such groups continue to experience serious human rights violations.

“It is also clear, however, that Syria’s majority Sunni Arab Muslim population has suffered greatly, both before and during the four plus years of the country’s terrible civil war.

“This is not a human rights crisis that simply comes down to the majority having brutalized the minority. Virtually everyone has suffered and continues to suffer.” UNHCR is the best judge of who is most vulnerable.

He also told me that we cannot make “a general assumption that only minorities live in non-camp settings and therefore the focus should be there.” Nor can we say that “non-Muslims there are at more risk than other groups that are considered vulnerable in accordance with UNHCR’s criteria which includes minors, women at risk, health issues, the elderly etc.

“It has an operational presence throughout the region and regularly interviews and assesses refugees’ protection needs. Canadian officials do not have that sort of presence and have no reliable access to the various locations where refugees reside, in and out of camps.”

Original Article
Source: thestar.com/
Author:  Haroon Siddiqui 

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