As said by
the The Right Honourable Beverley McLachlin, P.C., in her Word of Welcome on the Supreme Court of Canada web page, Canadians
are "privileged to live in a peaceful country. Much of the collective sense of
freedom and safety comes from our community’s commitment to a few key values:
democratic governance, respect for fundamental rights as well as the rule of
law and accommodation of difference, The commitment to these values must be renewed
on every occasion and the institutions that sustain them must be cherished."
Among those who valiantly uphold these values and institutions are the men and women, of the Canadian Armed Forces who put their lives on
the line to protect and defend the country and what Canadians stand for. Many
recognise that gratitude is owed to them, but few acknowledge, let alone are
prepared to remedy the fact that they have been deprived of important legal
rights by failing to reform and modernise the antiquated military justice
system.
Canadian soldiers and civilians tried in Canada before military
‘courts’, including summary trials, courts martial and other quasi-judiciary or
administrative proceedings, are subject to a different treatment that denies
them some of the fundamental rights Canadians are proud of and committed to.
Unlike
what prevails in other allied systems, the current Canadian military ‘justice’
system fails to provide many of the guarantees set forth in the Canadian
Constitution or under international law. For instance, Canadian military ‘judges’ are ‘soldiers
first’ and part of a military chain of command that is, to say the least, very loath to evolve and embrace positive
change. As a result, Canadian soldiers
and civilians falling under the military jurisdiction loose many of the important rights and freedoms conferred upon Canadian citizens.
The
Canadian military ‘justice’ system is in desperate need of reform. Members of
the Canadian Forces expect, are entitled to and deserve a modern, equitable
system of justice that Canadians would be proud of.
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