Civil Rights Group to Urge Release of Security Certificate
Prisoners and Reforms to Anti-Terrorism Law to Senate
and House Committees
Murray Mollard,
Executive Director, of the B.C. Civil Liberties Association (BCCLA)
will testify before the Senate Special Committee on the Anti-Terrorism
Act (ATA)
regarding security certificates and reform of the ATA on Monday, October
17, 2005
from 1:30-3:30 pm in Room 160-S in the Centre Block of the Parliament
Buildings.
BCCLA President Jason Gratl will join Mr. Mollard in testifying before
the House
Subcommittee on Public Safety and National Security on Wed. October
19 at 3:30
pm in Room 371 of the West Block.
The BCCLA is urging
the committees to advocate for the immediate release of all
security certificate detainees who have been imprisoned in Canada
under inhumane
conditions and subject to secret hearings while they await possible
deportation
orders to countries known to practice torture.
In addition, they
will urge the committees to recommend the repeal of the ATA
as a hasty and unnecessary response to the perceived threat of terrorism
after
September 11, 2001. Short of repeal, the Association is calling for
significant
amendment of the ATA including narrowing the definition of "terrorist
activity"
and restricting the power of government to impose secrecy on any matter
it
deems national security. The Association concludes that there needs
to be
significantly more robust mechanisms
for the accountability of national security
agencies.
BCCLA President
Jason Gratl: "Even a stone should cry to see the treatment
accorded security certificate prisoners - sentenced to years in solitary
confinement
by way of a Ministerial order. The security certificate process treats
liberty and
fundamental justice with callous disregard."
Mr. Mollard adds:
"The ATA was passed in record time to respond to a perceived
security crisis and its shows the flaws of ill-conceived drafting. We
will urge the
Senate and House committees to recommend major reforms to this law."Jason
Gratl is a criminal lawyer practicing in Vancouver and co-author of
"National Security,
State Secrecy and Public Accountability", forthcoming in the University
of New
Brunswick Law Journal. Murray Mollard, a lawyer with the Association
since
1994, has extensive experience on matters relating to national security,
police
accountability and privacy.Copies
of the BCCLA's brief will be available at the
Senate hearings and via its website at www.bccla.org.