CBC
reports that the Military Police Complaints
Commission (MPCC), a quasi-judicial body independent from the government and
the armed forces, has launched a "public interest investigation" into
a complaint filed under section 250 (18) of the National Defence Act regarding
the failure by the Military Police [MP] to properly investigate allegations of ‘torture’.
The original allegations were made by a single
individual but corroborated by no less than four of his former
comrades-in-arms.
The allegations state that between October 1983 and March 1984, recruits undergoing
basic infantry training at the CFB Wainwright Battle School were subject to an ‘escape
and evasion” drill, including a Prisoner of War (POW) exercise.
Approximately 33 recruits were involved.
Allegations of serious abuse of recruits
Recruits
were made to remove their clothes and were placed in prison cells that were too
small to allow recruits to move or sit.
Over the next 24 to 48 hours, the naked
recruits were sprayed through the jail door bars with cold water from a hose
while the windows were left open, letting in the outside air. The outside temperature
hovers around -15 and -30 C. Recruits did not have access to bathrooms.
Allegations
of torture were made to the Military Police in 2016. A few months later, the Military
Police investigator phoned the complainant to advise him that the investigation
had been closed. One of the reasons stated for the closure of the investigation
was that, allegedly, “torture” had not become an criminal offence in Canada until
1985.
Public Interest Investigation into the MP failure to investigate
The ‘conduct’ complaint filed with the MPCC alleged that the MP investigator
acted with professional negligence and incompetence in failing to investigate serious
criminal allegations.
This is not the first time that the Military Police has been subject to a conduct and performance complaint to the MPCC. Consider the following:
At the end, the Military Police failed to acknowledge or recognize the serious deficiencies revealed through the hearing.
Following the publication of the Final Report, there were no indication that the Military Police regretted any of the egregious deficiencies observed in this case, particularly in the interactions with the Fynes family and the mishandling of the suicide note.
There was no indication as to whether the issues raised by the MPCC were even seen as serious failures, and certainly no indication as to how, if at all, they would be addressed by the MPs.
All in all, the MP rejected, directly or indirectly, most of the findings and recommendations, made by the MPCC to improve their competence and independence.
Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.
Une réforme pour:
ReplyDelete- une équité envers les victimes
- nos valeurs Canadiennes
- un système judiciaire indépendant
- une police libre de policer
- une compétence minimale
- un comportement guerrier qui traversera les années 1950:
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/le-sang-du-p%C3%A9trole-massacres-meurtrier-ou-l%C3%A9gitimes-touchette-mba/
M. Touchette