From the CBC:
“Aid groups say Ottawa still hampering work in Afghanistan,
despite legislation”
Canadian aid groups say Ottawa hasn't cleared roadblocks that
bar them from getting aid into Afghanistan, despite Parliament passing
legislation this spring and allies issuing carve-outs to their own terrorism
laws nearly two years ago. Until this June, aid workers were vulnerable
to prosecution under the Criminal Code if they paid taxes for labour or goods
to Afghanistan's Taliban government, because doing so would amount to providing
financial support to an entity that Canada lists as a terrorist organization.
Parliament passed Bill C-41 in June, which sought to enact a
blanket exemption for humanitarian workers providing life-saving aid in
response to emergencies. It also committed Ottawa to eventually creating a
permit process for development workers, such as those building schools, to
apply for exemptions to terror laws. In their April budget, the federal
Liberals earmarked $5 million in this fiscal year to vet such applications, and
another $11 million in the following year. But Ottawa still has no timeline for
launching the permit process for development work. And some humanitarian groups
say the blanket exemption isn't enough for them to provide urgent support in
Afghanistan.
World Vision Canada's policy director Martin Fischer says
he's "frustrated and bewildered" that the process is taking so long. "We've
been in touch with Global Affairs and Public Safety at several moments to say
that this regime needs to be put in place with urgency," he said. The
Canadian head of Islamic Relief recently testified at a Senate foreign affairs
committee hearing that there is widespread confusion about how the legislation
works. "It's not moving fast enough," Usama Khan told senators in
late October. "I've heard directly from some aid agencies that it's still
status quo in terms of not being able to deliver aid because there is no
clarity on what is allowed." Khan said that different departments are
giving contradictory information on what counts as humanitarian versus
development aid, since the latter requires a permit.
A Canadian veterans group says roughly 50 Afghans with ties
to Canada have been deported from Pakistan back to Afghanistan. Ottawa says it
is trying to process claims faster during the crackdown. Fischer said
bureaucrats have consulted him on the same question, which he found confusing
since Global Affairs Canada has long-standing definitions that sort out which
initiatives count as reactive humanitarian projects and which are proactive
development work. "It's hard to understand why the machinery of government
is having a hard time putting in place what should be a pretty straightforward
bureaucratic process," Fischer said. He also noted that the humanitarian
exemption that took effect immediately in June has worked for some projects.
Fischer said it's allowed World Vision Canada to proceed with health and
nutrition work in Afghanistan, though they still can't do work to advance
women's rights without a permit.
Public Safety Canada would not provide any detailed
explanation of what's holding up the process, or say when groups will be able
to apply for permits for development work. "The work on implementation of
the authorization regime is underway," spokesperson Louis-Carl
Brissette-Lesage said in a written statement. "Government departments and
agencies are working diligently towards being able to start accepting and
processing applications."
Khan and Fischer both said that charities are unclear about
how information they provide to Ottawa regarding projects operating in
Afghanistan will be handled. The sector isn't sure which privacy protections
the federal government will uphold when it comes to Canadians and local staff
who are working on projects in Afghanistan that may put them at risk or draw
scrutiny from the Taliban. "It's not clarified in the legislation itself.
The (departmental) guidance needs to clarify that," Fischer said. He noted
that the legislation includes a mandatory review set to take place next June.
He said he worries the system will start operating so late that charities won't
have enough experience using the law to suggest how it can be changed.
MPs first called for the issue to be resolved in June 2022,
noting that the U.S., Australia and multiple European countries had already
found ways for aid workers to help people in Afghanistan without facing
terrorism charges. The United Nations has determined that two-thirds of the
country's population need humanitarian aid. "Afghanistan is facing an
unprecedented humanitarian crisis with a serious risk of systemic collapse and
human catastrophe," reads the latest update from the UN's lead
humanitarian agency. The country is beset by economic decline, malnutrition,
global inflation shocks, a teetering health system and natural disasters.
^ Come on Canada! You would think that after 2+ years and
with other Countries (like the US) able to find ways to supply money to Aid
Groups, but not to the Taliban Canada would be able to do the same. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/ottawa-afghanistan-aid-work-1.7037932
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.