Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Canada risks being seen as pandering to mass murders
Here's an ethical dilemma for you: does a person who may face torture deserve more compassion than hundreds of thousands of innocent murder victims?
Apparently Canada's immigration laws can't make a distinction or, if it does, seems to consider the threat of torture more inhumane. At least that seems the case by allowing an alleged killer to gain protection in Canada against punishment for his possible involvement in one of the biggest mass murders in modern history.
Our immigration rules afforded freedom to Leon Mugesera, who is accused in his homeland of Rwanda as being one of the trigger men the 1994 genocide that saw a 100-day massacre claim about one million Tutsis and Hutus.
Mugesera fought his deportation through the seemingly endless court proceedings that are entitled to him under our laws. His luck finally ran out on Monday, when the courts ordered him on a plane to Rwanda at Montreal's Pierre Elliott Trudeau Airport.
The sticking point during the laborious proceedings was that Mugesera could face torture if returned.
This country has been reluctant to deport suspected criminals, on "ethical grounds," no matter how serious their crimes. Torture and the death penalty are among the reasons.
But, essentially, it means we apply our standards of justice to other countries through our immigration process.
Serial killer Charles Ng, who evaded California authorities for the sex-torture murders of between 11 and 25 people by sneaking into Canada, enjoyed the same luxury.
Ng and Leonard Lake carried out these horrific executions on Lake's California ranch in 1983 and videotaped the gruesome details. Lake committed suicide after his arrest in 1985, while Ng fled to Calgary and was captured that same year. After a lengthy extradition battle, during which Canadian authorities refused to turn him over to the U.S. because he faced a death sentence if convicted, he was finally handed over in 1998. He now sits on death row in San Quentin State Prison.
As a nation, we must take care not to gain a reputation for pandering to and protecting murderers from the justice of their own countries. It's an extremely costly process to taxpayers and, ultimately, can mean we house other nations' criminals in our prisons.
It is time we re-examined the avenues of appeal open to such criminals and alleged criminals.
In 1992, Mugesera, then a fiery political Rwandan operative, delivered a blistering speech calling the Tutsis "cockroaches" and urging their extermination. Shorty after the speech, he was charged with inciting hatred and fled to Canada for protection.
While a handful of Mugesera's Canadian supporters wept at the airport on Monday, Rwandan authorities applauded Canada's decision, saying it was "the right thing."
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition January 28, 2012 A17
- Back to Top
- Return to The View from the West
Poll
Most Popular The View from the West
- Criticism of Hydro disappoints
- Report underlines feckless profligacy of provincial government
- Oilsands as 'carbon bomb' debunked
- Who will crash if F-35 program goes down?
- Islamist successes more surprising than threatening
- Smart people SLEEP LATE
- Israel wise to heed American pressure
- Obituaries —the long and the short of them
- Dividing line is real in Africa
- Myths about Riel hide the man
- Myths about Riel hide the man
- Who will crash if F-35 program goes down?
- Smart people SLEEP LATE
- Manitoba drivers get free ride on gas tax
- Basketball phenom 'confirms' Asian stereotype
- Enbridge pipeline bad for the economy
- They knew drug war was wrong
- Manitoba could join Minnesota in 175-km/h rail link
- Force of nature unheralded, unforgettable
- Air going out of war in Afghanistan
- Smart people SLEEP LATE
- Flood is not over, nor is the fight
- Myths about Riel hide the man
- Force of nature unheralded, unforgettable
- Fired environmentalist sees conspiracy
- Harper shrewdly dodges vision thing
- Canada exports jobs along with its oil
- Tell China to stop slave labour
- Feels like it's 1985 all over again
- It's time to push Manitoba Hydro's 'pause' button
- Criticism of Hydro disappoints
- Israel wise to heed American pressure
- Report underlines feckless profligacy of provincial government
- Israel wise to heed American pressure
- Force of nature unheralded, unforgettable
- Enbridge pipeline bad for the economy
- Myths about Riel hide the man
- Criticism of Hydro disappoints
- Métis of convenience, or conviction?
- In praise of the good inner city landlords
- 'No plans' to privatize, then and now
- War tale needs love angle
- Sauce for bus riders is sauce for car drivers
- Peace treaty in peril
- Obama torn by conflicting allies
- Time, it appears, is on Assad's side
- Russian arms used in slaughter of civilians in Syria
- Flood is not over, nor is the fight
- Harper creating 13 kinds of citizens
- It's time to push Manitoba Hydro's 'pause' button
- Education faculties should disappear
- First Nation co-signs away housing issue
- Israel wise to heed American pressure
Ads by Google








You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010; View the changes. New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.