-Caveat Lector-

 washingtonpost.com
Inquiry Exposes Canada's Role in 'Renditions'
Hearings Suggest Cooperation With U.S. in Sending Arab Canadian Citizen to
Syria for Interrogation

By Doug Struck
Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, June 26, 2005; A19



OTTAWA -- Maher Arar was teaching English to his fellow inmates in a Syrian
prison in September 2003 when a new prisoner caused a commotion at his cell
door.

The two haggard men stared at each other for long seconds, Arar recalled in
an interview here this week. Then they realized: They were both Canadian.

Arar, 34, a computer engineer who was born in Lebanon, says he was spirited
by U.S. authorities to Syria in 2002 and underwent repeated torture while
held there for nearly a year. Now, a judicial commission here is seeking to
determine how he and three other Arab Canadian citizens wound up being
interrogated in the same Syrian prison after coming to the attention of
Canadian or U.S. authorities.

Although much of the inquiry has been conducted behind closed doors, a
recent series of public hearings has embarrassed the Canadian government by
exposing details of Arar's "extraordinary rendition" -- the phrase used by
the CIA to describe the U.S. practice of secretly sending terror suspects to
countries where torture is routine. The hearings have also revealed a
greater Canadian role in the practice than previously acknowledged.

The case has added to the growing discomfort of U.S. allies over such
tactics in the war on terrorism. Critics in Sweden and Italy as well as
Canada have called their governments to task for cooperating in U.S.
renditions, which they say violate human rights.

In Canada, the Arar inquiry has sullied the country's self-image as a
principled defender of human rights and may result in a call for tighter
limits on intelligence-sharing between Canada and the United States,
according to analysts and people involved in the process.

"Most Canadians are sensitive to civil liberties," said Paul J.J.
Cavalluzzo, the lead counsel for the inquiry commission, which is headed by
the associate chief justice of Ontario province. "They understand it's a bad
world out there. But it doesn't mean we should turn our country into a
police state. If we do that, we have lost."

The United States has refused to cooperate in the hearings, declining to
send witnesses or documents.

The inquiry began after Arar was released without charges by Syria and
returned to his family in Ottawa in October 2003. Since then, a series of
hearings has disclosed that Canadian intelligence agents met with Arar's
Syrian jailers and exchanged information with Syrian officials about Arar.
They also suggested that Canadian diplomats were more anxious to see their
own countryman interrogated than released.

The government's embarrassment was capped this month by the appearance
before the commission of Canada's former ambassador to Damascus, Franco
Pillarella, who said he did not know Syria used torture in its jails,
despite widespread documentation of such practices by international human
rights groups. His icy testimony brought an outpouring of mockery in the
press.

"The more officials testify, the worse the picture gets," complained an
editorial in the Ottawa Citizen newspaper.

Arar and other observers, however, have expressed more concern about what is
not being divulged. Most testimony has been taken in 65 sessions that were
closed to the public, including Arar. Many documents submitted in evidence
are full of blacked-out redactions. And this week, the scheduled testimony
of a key Royal Canadian Mounted Police supervisor was postponed while
lawyers wrangled over the how much he should say in public.

"With eight months of [private] hearings, and less than two months of public
hearings, it's hard for me to tell what's been discussed," complained Arar,
who has sat through most of the open sessions.

Reserved and somber, Arar has been unemployed since he lost his engineering
job while in prison. His wife, Monia Mazigh, campaigned to win his release,
and she now works to support the family. They live in a tidy apartment
outside Ottawa with their son, 3, and daughter, 8.

Arar, who came to Canada at age 17, holds both Syrian and Canadian
citizenship. He insists he has never been involved in radical politics.
According to information disclosed in the inquiry, the anti-terrorism unit
of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police opened a file on him after observing
him with two other men who were already being watched.

Arar has since claimed that both those men, Syrian-born Abdullah Almalki and
Kuwaiti-born Ahmad Abou El-Maati, were merely casual acquaintances of his in
the small Muslim communities of Ottawa and Montreal.

On Sep. 26, 2002, Arar said, he was pulled aside by police at New York's
John F. Kennedy International Airport as he was changing planes on his way
back to Canada after visiting his wife's family in Tunisia. After 12 days of
questioning, he said, he was shackled, flown to Washington and on to Jordan,
and then driven to an intelligence prison in Syria.

There, Arar has said, he was confined in a dark cell the size of a coffin
for 10 months, beaten with electrical cords and reduced to wretched, weepy
state in which he signed false confessions about training in Afghanistan, a
place he later said he has never been.

"I was living a normal life. In the middle of that, I was taken and shipped
to Syria, where it changed me 180 degrees," he said. "I lost a year of my
life -- actually, a lot more. I'm still living in a different, psychological
prison."

The State Department, which acknowledges Arar was sent to Syria, has said he
was picked up by U.S. officials "based on information received from Canada."
However, it has also said that Canada's "approval or consent was not sought"
in the decision to ship him to a foreign prison. Arar said he wonders
whether Washington is trying to provide cover for its ally.

"I want to know if I was sent to Syria on behalf of Canadian security
agencies," he said in an interview at his apartment. "When the Americans
asked, did they nod?"

Others, including several public interest groups here, have asked whether
Canada has facilitated the interrogation of other citizens overseas,
including Almalki, the bruised and hollow-eyed man whom Arar met in prison.
Like Arar, Almalki was released by Syria without charge last year and
returned to Canada after nearly two years in prison.

El-Maati and a third Canadian returned from Syria, Iraqi-born Muayyed
Nureddin, have made similar charges through family members, lawyers or human
rights groups. All three men have declined to be interviewed by journalists,
reportedly for fear that publicity could bring harm to relatives still
overseas, but information on their cases has been presented to the judicial
inquiry.

Unlike Arar, none of the others claimed they had any contact with U.S.
authorities; they were allegedly detained while traveling in Syria. However,
all three were the focus of investigations by Canadian intelligence agents,
and each has claimed that Syrian interrogators asked questions that could
have come only from Canadian investigators, according to Alex Neve, the head
of Amnesty International's office in Canada.

"It certainly points to there having been some kind of information exchange
between security forces in Canada and Syria," said Neve, one of 18
representatives of public interest organizations that have been included in
the public portions of the Arar hearings.

Asked for comment, a spokeswoman for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said
the agency was limited in what it could say "because the commission
[inquiry] is still going on."

The head of the commission, Justice Dennis R. O'Connor, has said he wants to
complete separate public and classified reports by the end of the year.

Wesley Wark, a security specialist at the University of Toronto, said the
country's intelligence agencies are "fearful they will be hung out to dry
for doing what they were told to do" by the government after Sept. 11, 2001.

He said they were also worried that the inquiry would lead to restrictions
on Canada's intelligence operations and that the government might even "try
to build some human rights context into intelligence sharing. They can't see
any benefit in this inquiry," he said.

© 2005 The Washington Post Company

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