Category: First Edition

  • Canadian troops on defence or offence in Iraq?

    Canadian troops on defence or offence in Iraq?

     

    A National Defence Committee meeting on Tuesday that was supposed to provide a briefing on current military operations was instead dominated by questions about Canadian troops in Iraq.

    Chief of Defence Staff Gen. Jonathan Vance faced scrutiny from committee members about Operation IMPACT, which the Canadian Armed Forces has been participating in since Oct. 2014, with the goal of defeating the group known as Daesh, or the Islamic State. The operation, which currently involves 650 Canadian troops, is set to continue until Mar. 31, 2017.

    While the forces are supposed to be training, advising and assisting Iraqi security forces, Liberal MP Mark Gerretsen wanted to know the difference between “train, advise and assist” and “train, advise, assist and accompany.” According to Vance, these two phrases are very different —the first term is an advisory role, which is what Canadian forces are actually doing.

    “The first mission, train advise and assist, is the mission that we are on,” said Vance. “The ‘accompany’ is used to describe that you are actually with them, in the fight, on the front lines.”

    To further illustrate his point, Vance pointed out that when Canadian troops were in Afghanistan, they were actually fighting with Afghan soldiers. He said that in Operation IMPACT, troops support Iraqi forces in a medical capacity, help commanders maintain control, and train soldiers. They also, however have rules in place that allow for defence and fire in the event of an attack or approach that may overwhelm Iraqi troops, he said.

    “It is absolutely a part of the fact that we are there with them. We have the responsibility to protect ourselves and as we have explained repeatedly, have the responsibility to the defence of others if they are overwhelmed,” said Vance.

    According to Vance, Canadian forces have the weaponry that allows Canadian troops to stay off the front line but still eliminate threats, such as heavily armoured vehicles that may threaten Iraqi Peshmerga forces.

    Conservative Committee Member Pierre Paul-Hus, MP for Charlesbourg—Haute-Saint-Charles, was not convinced.  He continued to ask Vance whether or not Canadian Forces are engaging in offensive attacks but the general held his position.

    “If you are suggesting that our forces have been maneuvering so as to provide offensive fire, thereby taking the fight to the enemy, then you are wrong,” Vance responded. “We have responded only to provocation by Daesh where the intensity of their force could not be stopped by any means and I need to be as unequivocal on that as possible.”

    After the meeting, both Vance and Paul-Hus continued to speak on these points with Vance maintaining that Canadian troops are merely assisting Iraqi forces and Paul-Hus saying he believes that the whole truth is still not being told.

  • Rookie of the Year

    Rookie of the Year

    It’s obvious why everyone wants to be Bardish Chagger’s friend. The novice MP—already the Minister for Small Business and Tourism and now also the government House leader—looks naturally at ease among her constituents in the Kitchener Market on a recent Saturday, offering broad grins and friendly waves to all those passing through, sipping her Tim Hortons coffee through a straw.

    Not so long ago, a politician like Chagger—young, female and a visible minority—might have been relegated to the backbench. But instead, she’s been handed real decision-making power, and there are some changes she wants to make.

    “We need to be able to shake them up a little bit,” Chagger said, in an interview, adding that the best way is “to bring in somebody that’s not been in the halls of Parliament for too long, somebody who does question and challenge decisions that are being made.”

    First elected in October 2015 as the Member of Parliament for Waterloo—22 years after she first planted a Liberal sign on a front lawn for the then MP, Andrew Telegdi, whom she later served as executive assistant—Chagger is also the first woman to be appointed Leader of the House.

    The position calls for a steady hand and a thorough knowledge of parliamentary procedure, the kind of job not usually assigned to a young, first-time MP. At 36, Chagger is one of the youngest members in the cabinet, second only to the 31-year-old Maryam Monsef. Given that she was one of the co-leads for Trudeau’s Southwestern Ontario campaign, few observers were surprised when Chagger was named Minister for Small Business and Tourism. But her appointment as House leader, this August, certainly made waves, Jim Bronskill wrote in the Huffington Post at the time.

    “By having a government that looks like Canada, I believe, we’re more relevant because people can relate to us as well,” Chagger said.

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hasn’t just paid lip service to diversity, appointing more women, visible minorities and people with disabilities to his cabinet than any previous PM. There are now 18 rookies and 15 women in a cabinet of 30. Jodi Wilson-Raybould of the Kwakwaka’wakw peoples, a former Crown prosecutor from British Columbia, has become the first indigenous Minister of Justice. Trudeau gambled by appointing so many novice MPs to cabinet, but it may pay off, especially with Chagger.

    image

    “She was always very interested in policy,” Telegedi said over the phone, “and always well-liked.”

    Telegi said Chagger has the diplomatic skills necessary to navigate the role.

    Eric Davis, a lawyer who knew Chagger when they were both Young Liberals at the University of Waterloo, says Chagger has “always been community-minded and an exceptionally hard-worker.”

    Chagger recognizes the value of maintaining an open line of communication with the opposition, and plans to focus on teamwork rather than control in her role as House leader.

    “It’s not about one individual, it’s about the team that one comes with, one builds, one empowers,” said Chagger.

    She understands that the government can’t be “everything to everyone,” but Chagger and her fellow ministers are willing to try.

  • Liberals to repeal anal sex law

    Liberals to repeal anal sex law

     

    The Liberal government introduced legislation Tuesday to repeal a section of the Criminal Code that prohibits consensual anal sex by minors.

    Addressing reporters, Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould says that Section 159 is "discriminatory" and that the Criminal Code needs to be updated to be more inclusive.
    Addressing reporters, Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould says that Section 159 is “discriminatory” and that the Criminal Code needs to be updated to be more inclusive.

    There have been several attempts to repeal Section 159, and four appeal courts have deemed the law unconstitutional, but it has remained on the books.

    The section prohibits people younger than 18 from engaging in anal sex, despite being over the age of consent for other sexual acts.

    Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould said society has evolved and the law has to keep up.

    “This piece of legislation is about ensuring we eliminate discrimination and ensure equality,” Wilson-Raybould said after she tabled the legislation.

    history-of-anal-intercourseShe also noted that “Canada was among the first countries in the world to recognize same-sex marriage and our human rights act has long recognized the right to be protected from discrimination based on sexual orientation.”

    Also on Tuesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau appointed Edmonton MP Randy Boissonnault as his special adviser on LGBTQ2 rights. LGBTQ2 refers to lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, queer, questioning and two-spirited people.

    Boissonnault said that “there’s a lot of work to be done,” but the Liberals are ready to listen to Canadians to build an inclusive future.

    Helen Kennedy, executive director of Egale Canada Human Rights Trust, welcomed the repeal of Section 159.

    “It equalizes us as a community” she said. “It recognizes our relationships in the same way it recognizes straight relationships.”

    Egale released a scathing report earlier this year on Section 159, which has been used to charge 22 people with anal intercourse between 2008 and 2014.

    Alberta MP Randy Boissonnault (Edmonton Centre) says that he is a member of the LGBTQ2 community, being the first elected openly gay MP from Alberta.
    Alberta MP Randy Boissonnault (Edmonton Centre) says that he is a member of the LGBTQ2 community, being the first elected openly gay MP from Alberta.

    More than 20 members of the LGBTQ2 community met with Boissonnault Tuesday morning before the minister’s announcement to share their concerns with the new adviser.

    Jean-Sebastien Boudreault of Montreal Pride drove from Montreal to be at the meeting. He said he was pleased, saying that the MP was “really open” to their ideas for the future of the LGBTQ2 community.

     Wilson-Raybould said that this legislation does not cover pardons for previous convictions under the act.

    However Boissonnault said that pardons would be given due consideration, and the government would take time to do a “deep listen” to Canadians on the matter and choose appropriate action.

     

     

     

  • Canadian peacekeeping missions: war or peace?

    Canadian peacekeeping missions: war or peace?

    Mahamadou Taher Touré’s parents live in Bintagoungou, a small village near Timbuktu, Mali.

    Mahamadou Taher Touré and his wife Hawad Touré in their Gatineau home. Photo: Floriane Bonneville
    Mahamadou Taher Touré and his wife Hawad Touré in their Gatineau home. Photo: Floriane Bonneville

    They are often afraid for their lives, says the Quebec physician. Malians look up to Canadians because Canada does not have a history of colonialism in Africa, he says.

    The Canadian Armed Forces is going to Africa on a United Nations Peacekeeping Mission for the next three years. Canada might send its 650 troops either to Mali, the Central African Republic or Congo. If Canada’s forces go to Mali, Touré says, his parents and the general population will welcome them because the situation is escalating right now.

    “They are an impartial third party that is useful to resolving conflicts,” says Touré.

    The news of the new deployment raises questions about whether this new mission will put troops in harms’ way and not really effect any change on the terrain.

    Do Canada’s UN peacekeeping missions do the good that is intended? Canada’s mission in Rwanda in the 1990s was not so successful, according to Jim Parker, a retired lieutenant who lives in Whistler, B.C. Parker spent six months with the peacekeeping mission in Sudan in 2008 and he said it was not what he expected it would be.

    Retired Lieutenant Jim Parker in his cottage in Whistler, Alberta. Photo: Floriane Bonneville
    Retired Lieutenant Jim Parker in his cottage in Whistler, British Columbia. Photo: Floriane Bonneville

     

    “We had no new tires, we were unarmed,” he says. “Some schools were left half-finished, some wells were left half-finished,” he says.

    Moreover, the reports he would write about the locals’ situation were probably never read by anyone because nothing ever changed in the six months he was there, he says.

    Parker says Canadians invented the term peacekeeping – “in fact it was probably invented when Lester B. Pearson gave his speech when he received the Nobel Peace Prize.”

    While Canadians are known for having a peacekeeping tradition, Parker says “war” is a more appropriate description in most operations deemed as peacekeeping.

    The government should “quit trying to make it seem what it is not,” Parker says. Rather, Canadian troops will effectively be at war if they go to Mali, where the situation is anything but peaceful, he says.

    There were more than 100 casualties since the UN Operation MINUSMA started in 2013 in Mali.

    Opposition leader Rona Ambrose accuses the Trudeau government of sending troops to dangerous places so that Canada gains back its seat at the UN Security Council. Trudeau did make promises during the October 2015 election campaign that his government would re-engage with the United Nations.

    During Question Period last Friday, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan said that “wherever we send our troops we’ll send them with the appropriate equipment, we’ll send them with the appropriate training,” and “we cannot just be sending our soldiers into harm’s way all the time – we need to start preventing conflict so we can reduce these things.”

    Master Warrant Officer Daniel Dospital at the Legion on Kent Street in Ottawa on Remembrance Day evening, on Friday November 11th 2016. Photo: Floriane Bonneville
    Master Warrant Officer Daniel Dospital at the Legion on Kent Street in Ottawa on Remembrance Day evening, on Friday November 11th 2016. Photo: Floriane Bonneville

    Both Parker and Touré say they concur with the minister’s comment and that an approach that involves government officials on the terrain is better than a simple military operation.

    Parker adds that the government needs to also think of how it will ensure the security of the troops.

    But Master Warrant Officer Daniel Dospital says that troops have to do their jobs, regardless of the danger.

    “It’s not my job to question the government; it’s my job to do my job,” he says.

  • Reefer (and the) Man

    Reefer (and the) Man

    More than once, Kristina Simpson has had to deny her customers the cookies, candy, soda, and other treats sold at the store she manages on Bank Street.

    That’s because Weeds Glass and Gifts, unlike the Golden Baguette bakery down the street, sells edible products laced with medical marijuana. Weeds is one of several store-front dispensaries that have popped up in Ottawa since the April 20 announcement of the Liberal party’s intention to legalize marijuana. But even amidst shifting laws, many of these new “medical dispensaries” are still illegal.

    But Simpson is convinced that she is doing the right thing by offering patients easier access to the medicinal herb.

    “This is something that we all believe in here, and we all do know the consequences,” she says.

    It is therefore at significant personal risk that Simpson, like other dispensary employees in the city, operates her shop. She says she feels that what she does is important enough to risk the potential fallout of operating in a legal grey zone, especially in a time when the police response to dispensaries can be hard to predict.

    Kristina Simpson, manager of Weeds Glass and Gifts on Bank Street, Ottawa [Photo Amber-Dawn Davison].
    Kristina Simpson, manager of Weeds Glass and Gifts on Bank Street, Ottawa [Photo: Amber-Dawn Davison].

    “I’m not not concerned,” Simpson says with a laugh. “Of course it’s always a concern, but I mean, my beliefs override that.”

    Indeed, less than a week after police raids on seven Ottawa dispensaries lead to the arrest of nine employees, the possible consequences are tangible. But legal issues are not the only concern for “pot shop” workers. According to Ottawa police, six marijuana dispensaries in Ottawa have been robbed, several at gunpoint, in the few short months since marijuana shops, which previously had been hidden on back streets, starting springing up as store fronts.

    Ottawa Dispensaries

    Shops that comply with Health Canada’s Access to Cannabis for Medicinal Purposes Regulations (ACMPR), like Weeds, say they are confident that they will not fall victim to robbery, or police interference, simply because they haven’t yet.

    A constable with the Ottawa police who prefers to remain unnamed confirms this reality, saying she believes that other shops have experienced crime and intervention by making themselves easy targets, partly because they tend not to take the precautions they should.

    “When you think of an LCBO in comparison, they have video cameras, multiple staff working, and things in the store are strategically placed,” she explains. “You look at some of these sketchier dispensaries, and you see they have no security guards, no alarms, and some don’t even have video surveillance. That gives better odds than robbing a gas station.”

    Simpson, whose store has an installed security system with surveillance and a direct line to the police, says that some dispensaries are targeted for robbery because of the clientele they serve. ACMPR-compliant shops like Weeds tend to have better security and attract more mature, well-behaved customers, Simpson says. But some dispensaries are less stringent, and cater to younger demographics sporting “one-time ‘scripts” and looking for recreational drugs.

    According to the constable, the clientele is a huge factor in both the potential for robbery, and the likelihood of police intervention.

    “We receive complaints, and more complaints means more obligation to follow up,” she says.

    She compares the situation to two hypothetical bars, both operating without proper licenses. If one bar is and constantly receiving complaints while the other isn’t, there is a greater likelihood that the first bar will be investigated and shut down, even if both are technically breaking the law.

    But the “shady clientele,” as she puts it, are an issue for more than just the dispensaries. Employees in the pipe and bong shop across the street from Weeds say they are sick of young people coming into the shop, which does not sell marijuana, thinking it is a dispensary.

    “We don’t sell weed. As if we would mess up our lucrative business by dipping into illegal drug sales.”

    The disturbances to their shop have been so continuous that the manager has put up a sign reading, “We are NOT a dispensary. And we don’t know where they are!”

     Sign outside Cannabis Emporium, a head shop across the street from Weeds. [Photo Amber-Dawn Davison].
    Sign outside Cannabis Emporium, a head shop across the street from Weeds. [Photo: Amber-Dawn Davison].

    “We put up the sign because we got tired of repeating ourselves,” says one employee. “We don’t sell weed. As if we would mess up our lucrative business by dipping into illegal drug sales. All of our merchandise put together is worth at least a quarter of a million dollars… none of us are going to mess that up by selling two grams of weed for the price of our lunch.”

    With the Liberal government’s intention to legalize marijuana, the issue of legality may soon be taken out of the equation. In that context, Simpson and the constable share a vision for the relationship between the authorities and marijuana dispensaries: They would like to see well-regulated, responsible shops treated the same way as any establishment serving alcohol.

    The unofficial position of many police officers is that if they are properly run and have their documentation in order, ACMPR-compliant dispensaries are not much different than an LCBO store, and marijuana is not much different from alcohol.

    With the expected upcoming legalization, fines and restrictions similar to those governing alcohol use, such as penalties for using in public and possession of large amounts, might exist in the future.

    Simpson says authorities need to become involved, to regulate not only the product, but the spaces used to sell them.

    “They need to regulate it so there can be safety protocols and people do feel comfortable coming into these spaces,” she says. “The more regulations that are put in place, the more we can follow them.”

  • Canada has gone to the birds!

    Canada has gone to the birds!

    Five battle for the title of Canada’s national bird

    On Wednesday, the Royal Canadian Geographical Society will be announcing its recommendation for Canada’s national bird, and the competition is fierce.

    After nearly 50,000 votes from the public, five birds have flown to the head of the flock.

    “Canadians have become enthralled with the idea of choosing a bird to become our national emblem,” Gilles Gagnier, publisher of Canadian Geographic, said in a press release.

    The common loon, the snowy owl, the gray jay, the Canada goose, and the black-capped chickadee beat out over 40 other birds to claim their position as finalists.

    While the common loon is leading the pack with almost 14,000 votes, not everyone is in favour of the bird being the face of the loonie, and the country.

    Canada's National Bird

    “People think they are gentle birds, they are not, they’re killers – they’ll kill each other.” says Michael Runtz, a professor at Carleton University who has personally witnessed two common loons fighting to the death.

    Runtz, author of Wild Wings: The Hidden World of Birds, says that only one of the contenders deserves the title, the black-capped chickadee, and he won’t be happy if the nation gets it wrong.

    Unlike the other four birds, the chickadee is commonly found throughout Canada.

    “Most Canadians have met a black-capped chickadee. It goes to birdfeeders all winter long, it’s found in people’s backyards,” says Runtz. “I don’t think any other species has that combination of  . . . hardiness and compatibility with our encroachment on its natural areas,” he adds.

    Earlier this fall, Runtz was asked to sit on a panel of experts to defend the Canada goose as the choice for national bird, but he declined.

    “Terrible choice, terrible choice,” says Runtz when thinking about the Canada goose as the feathered masthead of the country.

    Bird expert, Michael Runtz, weighs in on the fierce competition for Canada's National Bird.
    Bird expert, Michael Runtz, weighs in on the fierce competition for Canada’s National Bird. Photo: Jordan Steinhauer

    Although the Canada goose is easily recognized, it may be known for the wrong reasons.

    According to Runtz, “we have problems associated with Canada geese.”

    They are known to eat farmer’s crops, soil beaches and cars with their droppings, and wreak havoc in public centers.

    “They even downed an airplane in New York a few years ago, so the Americans don’t like Canada geese either,” says Runtz.

    While Runtz says the final two contenders, the snowy owl and the gray jay are both admirable birds, they are not as accessible as the chickadee.

    The snowy owl, which is currently in second place, is a northern bird that is only found in some parts of the nation.

    Although it makes a perfect pet for Harry Potter, it may not be the best choice for Canada.

    Similarly, the gray jay lives a secluded life.

    “Unless you go to the gray jay’s turf, you don’t see them,” says Runtz.

    Taking the public vote into account, the Royal Canadian Geographic Society will announce its official choice for Canada’s National Bird Wednesday evening at their College of Fellows annual dinner at the Canadian War Museum.

    “If the chickadee doesn’t win, I’ll cause civil unrest,” Runtz vows.