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 ----- Original Message -----
 From: NCAWR Forum <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, December 02, 2001 10:57 PM
 Subject: Fwd: FW: [Ad Hoc] The Next G8 Summit Won't Look Like The Last One
 
From: "one huemyn to another" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: FW: [Ad Hoc] The Next G8 Summit Won't Look Like The Last One
Date: Fri, 30 Nov 2001 14:00:05 -0800

After reading the following, add in what we are now hearing about Bill
C-42. Bill C-42 you ask? Just heard about it on Thursday Nov.29/01. It gives
the Canadian federal government the ability to declare any Crown lands a
high security" area and militarize it for unspecified reasons. Does anyone
 else have any light to shine on Bill C-42?

-----Original Message-----
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Ad Hoc] The Next G8 Summit Won't Look Like The Last One

http://www.nologo.org/article.pl?sid=01/11/28/1254239&mode=nested&threshold

Next G8 Summit Won't Look Like The Last One 
Wednesday
November 28, @02:53AM

              by Naomi Klein

Ever since Vancouver hosted the APEC conference in 1997,
Canadian politicians have faced a dilemma. How do you clamp down on messy
street protests without violating fundamental laws that guarantee freedom
of assembly and prohibit political interference with policing?
 
 Post September 11, the answer has revealed itself, as
> elegant
 > >as
 > >it is brutal: ditch the laws.

For the past month, civil libertarians and politicians have
been
duking it out over whether Bill C-36 could be used against political
protesters. Justice Minister Anne McLellan says the law is designed to
target terrorists and terrorist groups," and insists it isn't an attempt
to crack down on "legitimate political activism and protests," such as the
demonstrations during the Summit of the Americas in Quebec City.
 
 In the face of these assurances, as well as minor amendments
to the bill, many have relaxed, convinced that the right to dissent is still
protected in Canada. That's because they haven't looked at Canada's other
 anti-terrorism law, Bill C-35.
 
Bill C-35 has been quietly making its way through  parliament, downplayed 
as a "housekeeping" measure. On the surface, all the bill does
is expand the definition of an "internationally protected person", those
foreign dignitaries who are granted diplomatic immunity when they come to
town. Some opposition MPs have objected to this largesse, saying Canada
should not be a safe haven for foreign criminals, even if they are
politicians.

 These concerns about "protected persons" only tell part of
 the story. The rest is revealed when C-35 is cross referenced with several
 clauses in Bill C-36 which classify many actions taken against those
"protected persons" as terrorist activities. As Dr. Michael Clinchy of
the  University of Western Ontario has argued, taken on their own, both
sections  > >look benign. But taken together, they form a one-two punch that 
will knock out the right to protest outside of international meetings.

 Call it the Kananaskis Clause, since the legal combo is clearly
designed to kick in for the next G8 summit in June, to be held in
Kananaskis, Alberta.

It works like this. First, Bill C-35 defines "internationally
protected persons" as "representatives of a foreign state that is a
member
of or participates in an international organization." The idea is taken
from the UN Convention granting diplomatic immunity to politicians attending
UN  conferences. But Bill C-35 expands the UN definition to include foreign
 visitors attending bilateral or multilateral meetings of any kind. That
means delegates to a trade summit with China, an APEC summit, and yes, a
G8  meeting. In a pen stroke, these events will be placed behind a shield of
 diplomatic immunity.
 
 Next, C-36 steps in, defining interference with "protected
 persons", including visiting dictators, as not just criminal acts but
 terrorist ones. Bill C-36 states that anyone who commits "a violent
 attack  on the official premises, private accommodation or means 
of transport of an  internationally protected person that is likely to 
endanger [that  person's]  life or liberty" has committed a terrorist act. 
In fact, anyone who  "threatens" to commit any of these acts is guilty 
of terrorism, and will  lose many of their constitutional rights as outlined 
in the rest of the  bill.  

 These vague definitions raise many questions: is blocking a  road  on 
the way to a summit an attack on the "means of transportation" of
 "internationally protected persons" that restricts their "liberty?" 
Was  pushing against the chain link fence that surrounded so much of 
Quebec City  during the Summit of the Americas in April "a violent attack 
on the  official  premises" of a protected conference?
 
If both C-35 and C-36 become law (which looks very likely)  and  a  
group  puts out a flyer announcing its intention to block the road on the  
way  into Kananaskis (a pledge some have already made), its members 
could be  charged with committing a terrorist act, a crime punishable by up 
5 years  in  prison. Anyone who follows through on the threat and blocks the 
road - a  common tactic during strikes, summits, and native blockades - could 
face  up  to 14 years in prison.  

To be clear, the question is not whether activists have the  right to inconvenience 
conference delegates or push against chain link  fences. Under current laws, many 
protesters are already facing criminal charges for precisely these activities. 
The question is whether these are  acts of terrorism, on legal par with hijacking 
planes 
and planting bombs. 

If Minister McLellan is to be believed when she says that  her  government is 
not trying to use the anti-terrorism campaign to outlaw  political protest, she 
has more amendments to make. She needs to take out  the Kananaskis clause

From: www.nologo.org

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