----- Original Message ----- 
From:  [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, October 22, 2004 2:00 PM
Subject: Fw: Six Arrested at CSIS Toronto 
Sit-In to Protest Secret Trials

 
Tim Schmucker
Peacebuilders Coordinator
Toronto Regional Representative
Mennonite Central Committee Ontario
416-423-9229

----- Forwarded by Tim Schmucker/MCCO 
on 10/22/2004 01:58 PM -----
 
 
SIX ARRESTS MADE AT CSIS AS SIT-IN 
DEMANDS SECRET EVIDENCE BEING 
USED TO DETAIN CANADA'S SECRET 
TRIAL FIVE
 
TORONTO, OCTOBER 20, 2004 -- Six people 
were arrested today following a sit-in in the lobby 
of the building that houses the Toronto offices of
Canada's national spy agency, CSIS. 


The group, made up of folks from Burlington, Hamilton,
 Dundas, Durham, and Toronto, had been seeking a
meeting to discuss the secret "evidence" which has 
been used to detain five Muslim men a collective 164 
months, or 13 and a half years, behind Canadian prison 
bars without charge or bail.


Sponsored by the Campaign to Stop Secret Trials in 
Canada, the group chose the date of October 20 
because it marks three years in solitary confinement 
for secret trial detainee Hassan Almrei, a Syrian 
refugee held in Toronto's Metro West Detention Centre
and one of the five Muslim men currently detained without 
charge or bail. 


Next week in Ottawa, secret trial detainee  Mohamed 
Harkat will attend the public portion of his secret trial, 
after which the judge will retire with CSIS and 
government lawyers to discuss the evidence -- if any 
exists -- without Harkat and his lawyer present. 


Mohammad Mahjoub, held since June 2000 in Toronto, 
is currently in solitary confinement; Mahmoud Jaballah 
has been detained since August, 2001, and Adil 
Charkaoui detained since May, 2003. 


"We sit here because we have tried just about every 
channel available to us," the group wrote in a statement.
 "But time is not on our side. These men are shadows 
of their former selves, often broken in body, and 
scarred in spirit. Their families are traumatized, their
communities fearful. And each day they wake brings 
the same nagging question: why are they being held 
behind bars, and why is Canada attempting to deport 
them to torture?


"We sit here not because we despair, but because 
we hope. Perhaps our willingness to take some risk, 
to practice some truth-seeking, Gandhian nonviolence, 
will open some minds, some hearts, some souls,  to 
the crime of secret trials in Canada and the pain they
have inflicted on individuals, families, and communities."


The group were charged with failure to leave premises 
when directed as well as engaging in a prohibited activity
on private property and released shortly after their arrests. 
Those arrested and charged are Kirsten Romaine, Rae
Mitchell, Diana Ralph, Chris Shannon, Barney 
Barningham and Matthew Behrens.


About ten people entered the lobby shortly after 11 
am and sat on benches that they imagined were 
for...well...sitting. Security came within a few minutes 
to ascertain why we were sitting on those benches.


"Because benches are made to be sat upon," 
explained one. A member of the group called upstairs 
to CSIS requesting that a meeting be held immediately 
to discuss transfer of the secret "evidence" to the 
lawyers of the detainees, so they can defend their 
clients. Other security officials showed up to make 
extensive explanations about the fact that, even though
CSIS is a federal government agency, it is housed in a
building that is "private property."


Police were eventually called in and, after asking us 
almost a dozen times to leave, were eventually forced 
to make arrests.


One particularly interesting exchange between a resister
and a police officer went like this: OFFICER: Well, you'll 
have your 15 seconds on the news tonight.

RESISTER: I hope these men will be released


OFFICER: Are they illegal immigrants? What are the 
charges?


RESISTER: No Charges. They're refugees and 
permanent residents, and this could now be done 
to citizens.


OFFICER: Well, it could be me or you next.


RESISTER: Yes, it could be, that's why we're doing
this. We're trying to generate public support for these 
men.


OFFICER: I think it's very important that you're doing 
this. If the public doesn't know about this, these men 
could just disappear. It happened in Chile, it could 
happen here.


RESISTER: We think they should get a fair and open 
trial so they can defend themselves. There must be 
checks and balances.


OFFICER: I agree, there must be checks and 
balances.


Another arrestee reports that the arresting officer 
apologized for having to make the arrest, for after 
having heard about the reason for the protest, the 
officer felt a sense of shame that he would be
hauling such folks out of the CSIS building.


The six plan to contest the charges, a right that 
thus far remains unavailable to the five secret trial 
detainees.


Below is a statement the group presented during
the sit-in.


For more info. call (416) 651-5800.




Campaign to Stop Secret Trials in Canada,
PO Box 73620,
509 St. Clair Ave. West
Toronto, ON M6C 1C0, 
www.homesnotbombs.ca, [EMAIL PROTECTED]


STATEMENT FOR THE CSIS SIT-IN,
October 20, 2004


Today is a sad anniversary. It marks three years in 
solitary confinement for Hassan Almrei, a Syrian 
refugee held at Metro West Detention Centre without 
charge or bail on secret evidence neither he nor his 
lawyers are allowed to see.


Hassan is one of five Muslim men collectively held 
164 months, or 13 and a half years, on CSIS secret 
trial security certificates. They are Mohammad 
Mahjoub, father of two, held since June, 2000; 
Mahmoud Jaballah, father of six, held 9 months in 
1999, cleared of allegations, re-arrested in August
2001, held since then despite CSIS admitting there's
no new evidence; 


Mohamed Harkat, married, held since December, 
2002; and Adil Charkaoui, father of two, held since 
May, 2003.


None of these men has been charged with, much 
less convicted, of any crime here in Canada.


 Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and
other human rights experts agree that all their lives 
are at risk if deported. Their lives continue to be 
degraded by the indefinite incarceration which has
 led one Federal Court judge to conclude we have 
a Canadian version of Guantanamo Bay.


All the men have called on the government to charge 
them if there is a case, and to try them in an open,
fair trial with full disclosure of the case against them. 
Otherwise, they should be released immediately.


* We sit here because we want CSIS to hand over
the secret "evidence" to us, which we will pass on
to the lawyers of the detainees.


* We sit here because we cannot do otherwise.
These men are our brothers, as they are yours. 
And as Martin Luther King, Jr., said, no piece
of paper can make them any less so. We are 
obligated to be here, in respect of international
laws and covenants Canada has signed and the 
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and in honour 
of that human bond which calls us to respect and
cherish one another's dignity and humanity.


* We sit here because we are rapidly running out 
of options. We have tried many times to meet with 
representatives of CSIS, but each time we have 
been met with locked doors and cordons of police, 
whether here in Toronto or in Ottawa. We have 
organized long-distance walks, educational fora, 
countless vigils and letter campaigns; met with 
MPs, sought meetings with the Prime Minister and 
Deputy Prime Minister; spent countless hours in 
court during the open portions of the secret trials; 
written many letters to and received many phone
calls from the detainees themselves. We have
fasted with the detainees; we have laughed with
them, cried with them, shared their hopes and 
dreams.


* We sit here because we have tried just about 
every channel available to us. But time is not on
our side. These men are shadows of their former 
selves, often broken in body, and scarred in spirit. 
Their families are traumatized, their communities 
fearful. And each day they wake brings the same 
nagging question: why are they being held behind
bars, and why is Canada attempting to deport 
them to torture?


* We sit here not because we despair, but because
we hope. Perhaps our willingness to take some risk,
to practice some truth-seeking, Gandhian nonviolence, 
will open some minds, some hearts, some souls, to 
the crime of secret trials in Canada and the pain they 
have inflicted on individuals, families, communities.


Perhaps it may be considered a tad indelicate for 
us to be sitting where we are. But too often, we have 
been locked outside of the building, and our pleas for 
a meeting ignored. Today we are here to say we 
cannot, we must not, be ignored. Too many lives are 
on the line, and concepts like conscience and rule of 
law in Canada are in danger of being disappeared
just as these men have been.


Together, let us find a humane solution.

=================================================

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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