The Asian Human Rights Commission appreciates and welcomes the announcement by the new government of Pakistan to commute death sentences to life imprisonment. The AHRC hopes that the government of Prime Minister Syed Yousaf Raza Gillani will abolish the law which allows capital punishment by hanging...
Marking World Refugee Day on Friday 20 June, UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres said that providing protection for refugees today is vastly more challenging than when his office began work in 1951 trying to find solutions for Europeans uprooted in the aftermath of World War II.
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On the 12 June 2008 the US Supreme Court recognized, in the case of Boumediene v.Bush, the right of those detained at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba to challenge their detention in US civilian courts. Amnesty International described the ruling as an essential step towards restoring the rule of law to the USA’...
By Gore Vidal
On June 10, 2008, a counterrevolution began on the floor of the House of Representatives against the gas and oil crooks who had seized control of the federal government. This counterrevolution began in the exact place which had slumbered during the all-out assault on our liberti...
Reporters Without Borders is worried about the kidnapping of leading cyber-dissident Huang Qi, the founder of the human rights website 64Tianwang (http://www.64tianwang.com). He and two other activists were forced to get into a car by three unidentified men at around 7 p.m. on 10 June in Chengdu, th...
Thonglin was 13 years old when she was sold into prostitution. "My aunt asked if I would like to come with her to Thailand to find a job so that I could earn money for her family, and I agreed,"...
“I've been living away from home for three years," says Alfredo, a boy in prostitution who was working as a dancer in a club in Acapulco, Mexico. "I had many problems because my dad drank a lot...
Two guys were taking chemistry at the University of Louisville. They did pretty well on all of the quizzes, midterms, and labs, and had a solid "A" going into the final. They were so confident...
By Pat Buchanan
Freedom of the press is on trial in Canada.
The trial is before a court with the Orwellian title of the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal. The accused are Maclean's magazine...
In its effort to fight terrorism, France routinely arrests and prosecutes people for being associated with possible terror suspects, undermining international fair trial standards, Human Rights Watch said...
We have put together the most awesome video about Canada. We show the world what kind of country we have become and you will love the stunning color.
Please take 1 minutes and 30 seonds to have...
As a person who has spent his lifetime in advocating peace and civil rights it is time to write. The subject of Iran needs to be addressed in a definitive way.
In order to put this in some order,...
German Defense Minister Franz Josef Jung confirmed on Tuesday that Germany is planning on increasing the number of troops stationed in Afghanistan by 1,000, later this year.
The Asian Human Rights Commission appreciates and welcomes the announcement by the new government of Pakistan to commute death sentences to life imprisonment. The AHRC hopes that the government of Prime...
Marking World Refugee Day on Friday 20 June, UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres said that providing protection for refugees today is vastly more challenging than when his office began work...
On the 12 June 2008 the US Supreme Court recognized, in the case of Boumediene v.Bush, the right of those detained at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba to challenge their detention in US civilian courts. Amnesty International...
By Gore Vidal
On June 10, 2008, a counterrevolution began on the floor of the House of Representatives against the gas and oil crooks who had seized control of the federal government. This counterrevolution...
Reporters Without Borders is worried about the kidnapping of leading cyber-dissident Huang Qi, the founder of the human rights website 64Tianwang (http://www.64tianwang.com). He and two other activists...
The governing Conservatives and opposition Liberals are pretty close to a compromise on Afghanistan regarding when to end the combat mission.
The government is now proposing to end that mission in July 2011 and have the last of the troops leave by the end of that year. The Liberals on the other hand want the combat to end in February 2011 and the last troops brought home by July. There is little doubt that the country’s two main political forces will be able to compromise further, probably splitting the difference and agreeing to end the mission in April 2011 and bring the last of the troops home by October.
We don’t know the name of the last Canadian soldier who will die in Afghanistan but soon we’ll have a pretty good idea of when that death will occur. There is now no major difference in policy between any of Canada’s main political parties. They all have the same position and, as the old joke says, are merely haggling over the price. The price in this case is the exact date when the troops will “cut and run”, no matter what stage the mission is at.
When that date is agreed upon, the politicos will all congratulate themselves and the pundits will beam about how well minority governments work. What will be lost in all of this are the men and women who are serving or will serve in Afghanistan. If we ask Canadians to risk their lives and sometimes make the supreme sacrifice the least we can do is give their lives and their deaths meaning. Having a goal such as defeating the Taliban would be nice. Unfortunately, with the possible exception of Islamic fanatics, no one fights wars like that anymore. The new normal is now that the main function of modern warfare is to have an exit strategy; when the fighting ends is more important than what is to be accomplished. Soldiers who lose their lives in the future will not be dying for any purpose. They will merely be the unfortunate ones who didn’t survive long enough to run out the clock.
All of this brings us to NDP leader Jack Layton. As the two major parties throw dates like “February” and “July” around, Layton is becoming more and more credible. The NDP has always held the position that the troops should be brought home now, with “now” of course varying over the months and years. Layton and the NDP’s reasons are that the troops will be “safer” if they return to Canada; leaving them in Afghanistan will put them in harm’s way and therefore bringing all the troops home so they can be safe from IEDs is actually the best way to support the troops. While no doubt, some N Dippers genuinely feel this way, the real reason is that the NDP are a pacifist party and there hasn’t been a war yet that was worth fighting and dying for. Except possibly in Darfur or another similar trendy conflict, but if Canada ever did send troops in that region, the NDP would be screaming to bring those troops home too. But all of the major political parties agree on one thing now; winning and defeating the enemy is not the main goal. The only important objective is the date by which all the troops will be brought home. Since that is the major objective, Layton’s date of “now” seems more appropriate than some arbitrary date in the future.
The Taliban, who are no doubt sitting in their caves tuned into CBC, are probably having a good laugh at all this. Unfortunately, this will cost the lives of Canadian soldiers who are unable to make it to whatever cutoff date is chosen. Perhaps we should pay more attention to Jack.