Southern Alberta Council on Public Affairs (SACPA)
Indefinite Detention without Charges: In Canada? Really? (Part 2 Q&A)
- Autor: Podcast
- Narrador: Podcast
- Editor: Podcast
- Duración: 0:31:16
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Sinopsis
Imagine spending years in prison without being charged with a crime or knowing exactly what you're accused of. This presentation is a sobering examination of the Canadian government’s use of security certificates, a Kafkaesque tool that allows for indefinite detention without charges, based on evidence not revealed to the accused or their lawyers. Since 1999, this rare and highly controversial device has been used to detain at least five men for nearly 30 years combined. To date, none has been charged with a crime or seen the evidence against them. Mohamed Harkat was arrested under a security certificate in 2002. He spent 43 months in jail (one year in solitary confinement) before being released under strict house arrest conditions in 2006. Mr. Harkat was the center of the second Supreme Court challenge against security certificates, a challenge that was lost late last year. He presently lives under restrictions in Ottawa with his wife Sophie Harkat. Sophie Harkat a graduate student in Public & Media.