Ukrainian
Voice (Winnipeg) | July 19, 1999,
p. 4
Canadians
Must Recognize Denaturalization and
Deportation for what it is by Eugene Harasymiw, Ll.B WHILE many of us were out celebrating
Canada Day with our families by taking in
the numerous events across the nation,
intended to instill in us pride of
citizenship, it would have been helpful to
pause to consider that some Canadians are
having their citizenship arbitrarily
withdrawn. This should have led us to
consider whether all those wonderful
things about Canada that the politicians
were telling us are true. It would have
also been a good time to ask ourselves
whether those fine democratic principles
the politicians were referring to were
actually working as intended, or whether
they were being manipulated and were thus
eroding before our eyes. By far the most graphic yet
unacceptable example of the erosion of the
democratic principles that built this
country is found in the use of the process
of denaturalization and deportation
(referred to here as "d & d"),
recently adopted by our federal government
to deal with alleged war criminals. As
citizens of this country, every single
Canadian ought to be aware of and be very
concerned with this disturbing and
indefensible development. In the wake of the Deschenes Commission
report of Dec., 1986, the then federal
government instituted changes to laws in
order to expedite criminal trials of
alleged war criminals--a policy the
Ukrainian community has consistenty
supported. From the beginning, having
chosen suspects from only one era of
history, being World War II, and having
accused them of committing crimes against
only one identifiable group, the political
tone was set. It was patently obvious the
process was intended to serve a narrow
political agenda, rather than the interest
of justice. After four criminal trials involving a
jury, several appellate courts and the
Supreme Court of Canada produced no
convictions, the lobbyists pushing their
agenda convinced the current government in
1995 to adopt d & d, based on what was
really a contaminated U.S. model. What, then, are the elements within the
d & d process which have eroded our
justice system? And what are the specific
reasons all Canadians should be concerned
and should oppose this inherently suspect
policy? The fundamental flaw in use of d &
d is that alleged criminal actions are
being tried using a civil process. This
civil process seeks to show a person
obtained Canadian citizenship by
fraudulent means--that is, by failing to
reveal certain wartime activity--which
also happens to be the subject matter of
criminal charges the Crown is otherwise
unable to prove. Considering the lack of
documentary evidence, all since destroyed
by the same federal government, the
process invites the hearing judge to draw
"inferences" from highly conjectural
"testimony". This would never stand up in
criminal court. Consequently, the suspect is denied
those safeguards, otherwise available to
an accused in a criminal trial: right to
trial by jury; right not to incriminate
oneself; right to be represented by
counsel at all times; right to full
disclosure of evidence by the Crown; right
to cross-examine all witnesses in person;
and the right of appeal. Each and every
safeguard listed here is absent in d &
d, regardless of politicians' specious
claims to the contrary. In short, d &
d is about casting guilt on a suspect
based on implication and association
involving events alleged to have occurred
50 years ago, and not on substantive
evidence. That makes it fundamentally a
political exercise. These shortcomings are capped off by
the burden of proof with which the Crown
is charged--this being the easier balance
of probabilities as opposed to proof
beyond a reasonable doubt, as is required
in criminal cases. As if the process itself were not
repugnant enough, the handful of "trials"
involving revocation of citizenship
against alleged war criminals has been
characterized by some of the most
unsavoury tactics ever used by government
prosecution in this country. These
include: underhanded methods of gathering
"evidence"; introduction of materials in
mid-trial; use of KGB coached "witnesses";
use of so-called expert historians who are
nothing more than propaganda tools;
perversion of the burden of proof using a
spin on the presumption of regularity in
the execution of official tasks principle;
and so on. One of the recent trials was
prefaced by a tour by the presiding judge
of purported sites of massacres and of
cemeteries where the alleged victims were
buried--a tactic that has no place in
Canadian justice. The current Justice Minister has
compounded matters by hiring the former
director of the Office of Special
Investigations, the agency that spent 17
years deliberately framing John
Demjanjuk as being the so-called "Ivan
the Terrible". This same Neal Sher
is currently under criminal investigation
for perjury in the United States; this
same OSI is now saying Demjanjuk was not
"Ivan the Terrible" after all, but was in
locations other than where they had spent
two decades claiming he was. Can we, as Canadians, allow this
debasement of civil liberties and this
perversion of due process to go on?
Considering that all 3 suspects who have
lost their cases are of Ukrainian descent,
I suggest to you it is time we
collectively oppose the d & d policy.
We can do this effectively by concerted
political action, as is our democratic
right. There are dozens of ways to
help. You can begin by writing your M.P. and
voicing your strongest objection. For
other steps contact us at:Alberta Ukrainian Self-Reliance
League Civil Liberties Standing Committee 11024 - 82 Ave. Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G 0T2 fax: (780) 457-5170 voice mail: (780) 431-9855 |