A useful compromise is possible on the issue of the Afghan detainee documents
The Speaker of the House, Peter Milliken, wisely urged that it is vital to de-escalate the crisis over access to documents on Afghan detainees. But Parliament must not settle for half-measures, writes Amir Attaran.
May 1, 2010 Four years ago in this newspaper, I introduced Canadians to a problem about Afghan detainees. I warned that Canada's military had "signed a treaty with Afghanistan that dangerously -- and illegally -- compromises Canadian soldiers and our country's taboo on torture." In transferring often innocent detainees to unsafe Afghan prisons, I wrote, the Harper government and the Canadian Forces' commanders recklessly "(risked) that Canadian soldiers will be prosecuted as parties to torture." Editorial Continues





The Speaker of the House, Peter Milliken, wisely urged that it is vital to de-escalate the crisis over access to documents on Afghan detainees. But Parliament must not settle for half-measures, writes Amir Attaran.
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