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RCMP watchdog adopts snail as symbol

Norma Greenaway, Ottawa (Canwest News Service) – Paul Kennedy has embraced the snail as a symbol for his persistent campaign to push the federal government into creating an independent RCMP watchdog with real teeth.

An elegant Murano Venetian-glass sculpture of the slow-moving, spiral-shelled mollusk, a gift from his wife Judy during a recent trip to Italy, has become a treasured addition to his office decor.

Kennedy, the head of the Commission for Public Complaints Against the RCMP, also opened his latest annual report with a phrase taken from the writings of Charles Haddon Spurgeon–one of Britain’s best-known 19th-century preachers–which Kennedy clearly finds comforting.

“By perseverance the snail reached the ark,” it reads.

Or, so Kennedy hopes. After all, it has been more than 30 months since Dennis O’Connor, the judge who came down hard on the RCMP in his report on the Maher Arar affair, recommended the CPC be renamed and restructured into a muscular, independent body with the power to review all RCMP national security activities, as well as the activities of the Canada Border Services Agency.

The current CPC is a toothless wonder by most accounts because it has to rely on voluntary input from the RCMP for its largely complaints-driven investigations.

By contrast, the proposed new review body would have access to all RCMP files and also have the power to initiate investigations and to subpoena documents and compel testimony from any individual or entity it deems of possible use to its work. O’Connor gave the new body a rather unwieldy moniker: Independent Complaints and National Security Review Agency for the RCMP.

Since O’Connor’s report in December 2006, his call for increased independent oversight of the RCMP and the country’s national security apparatus has been echoed in a handful of other reports, among them two from parliamentary committees.

The Conservative government has greeted the recommendations with positive rhetoric. But it has not yet proposed oversight legislation, and critics are losing patience.

The inaction means Kennedy, a lawyer and senior bureaucrat who took the CPC post in October 2005 thinking the job would last no more than 18 months, has been reappointed three times to one-year terms.

At the time of his initial appointment, the former Liberal government had appointed O’Connor and asked him, as part of his mandate, to craft a new review mechanism for the RCMP that, Kennedy said, he thought would be accepted and implemented in good time.

Two elections and almost four years later, Kennedy is still pleading the case for effective RCMP oversight at every opportunity, and said he doesn’t want to leave the job until legislation is in place.

Public Safety Minister Peter Van Loan’s explanation for the delay in proposing a “new comprehensive oversight mechanism” is that the government wants to wait for the recommendations from the inquiry into the 1985 Air India bombing under former Supreme Court justice John Major.

Major’s five-volume report, which is expected to advocate changes to Canada’s security and intelligence operations, still needs to be copy-edited and translated and is at least two months away from being released, according to the latest estimates.

Considering the inquiry deals with the “most serious terrorist event” in Canadian history, there’s no point in introducing legislation that hasn’t taken Major’s findings into account, Van Loan said in an interview.

“We could effectively almost roll forward with the new oversight mechanisms right now,” Van Loan said.

“The preference is to make sure that we respect the commitment that was made to have an Air India inquiry occur and make its findings meaningful.”

Opposition MPs said there is no excuse for delaying legislation because the recipe for restoring the credibility of the RCMP is already well known.

“Why hold up all the action for yet another inquiry? It’s preposterous,” said Liberal MP Mark Holland, the party’s public safety critic.

Martin Rudner, an Ottawa-based national security expert, disagreed, and said it makes sense to wait for Major’s report.

Rudner, a professor emeritus at Carleton University, was a member of a panel that advised O’Connor while he was writing his report on a new review mechanism for the RCMP.

Rudner said Major is likely to recommend significant changes to the architecture of the security and intelligence community in a bid to ensure it’s better designed and equipped to tackle terrorism.

“You want to fit the oversight program into the new architecture,” Rudner said.

Amnesty International’s Neve contended, however, that the slowness in enacting an O’Connor-style oversight has left an unacceptable gap in the system for too long.

For example, he said, Abousfian Abdelrazik, the Canadian who was detained and stranded in Sudan for six years, could have turned to that oversight body when he got home in a bid to get to the bottom of what role, if any, Canadian officials or agencies played in his ordeal.

“Instead, he comes back to the same black hole of review and oversight that Maher Arar and Abdullah Almalki and all the others did,” Neve said.

Neve was referring to the experience of Almalki and two other Arab-Canadian men, Muayyed Nureddin and Ahmad El Maati, whose brutal treatment in Syria became the subject of a federal inquiry headed by former Supreme Court justice Frank Iacobucci. In the end, Iacobucci concluded the actions of Canadian officials from the RCMP, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service and the Foreign Affairs Department contributed indirectly to the three men in Syria.

Critics also point to the case of Robert Dziekanski, the Polish immigrant who died after he was Tasered by RCMP officers at the Vancouver International Airport, as a painful reminder of why strengthened oversight of the RCMP can’t wait.

Categories: Commission for Public Complaints Against the RCMP.

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2 Responses

  1. The CPC has a very broad mandate and limited resources. In the late 1980s, the issue of RCMP accountability was being raised in many of the contract policing provinces, particularly in B.C. Ottawa came up with the solution of the CPC to placate critics of the RCMP and to let the contract provinces off the hook. Attorney or Solicito Generals in various provinces could simply refer complaints against the RCMP to the CPC and just concentrate on complaints against municipal or regional police officers. I get the feeling that Ottawa figured that that was all they had to do. “You want us to get off our asses and do something, who do you think you are?”

    I dunno, the people who elect politicians and pay their saleries?

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    M.S. Thomson2009.08.27 @ 23:36
  2. No wonder the CPC is toothless if they rely on the RCMP’s credibility in any way shape and form to conclude the complaints against this police force.

    IF, if they must have access to all RCMP files by force, have power to initiate investigations by force, subpoena documents by force and compel testimony by force from any individual or entity it deems it possible to do it’s job it is toothless to say the least and hardly needed to do the job it was called to do.

    It’s time the Government created oversight legislation to compell the RCMP to tell the truth when it comes to matters of secrecy and criminal activities so someone to be held accountable and responsible – if this is still possible here in Canada.

    This should have all been done when the Commissioner resigned and disgraced the force, Canadians and showed all of us all how bad this force is really running. Then we had the Air India affair and the tazer deaths folowing the trail of destructions and all we have seen from our politicians are stalling tactics not actions showing Canadians that they are different than the RCMP in this regard…..

    It’s sad to see our country is run by these kinds of people and I hope someone can do something soon to correct these issues.

    I’m so happy to see the media coming against this injustices and some of the judges attempting to corect these miscariages of justice even though their hands are tided to say the least, thry are attempting to make these attrocities right.

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    Honourable2009.08.26 @ 18:57