UN, rights watchdogs urge Canada to save its ‘arbitrarily detained’ children in Syria
OTTAWA — A United Nations rights advocate and Human Rights Watch Canada say the Trudeau government isn’t living up to its new international campaign against arbitrary detention because it is abandoning 25 Canadian children trapped in northern Syria.
Fionnuala Ni Aolain, the UN Special Rapporteur for the Protection and Promotion of Human Rights while Countering terrorism, says Canada is one of 57 countries on a “list of shame” because it won’t take active steps to repatriate its foreign nationals trapped in Kurdish-controlled camps in northern Syria.
Farida Deif, Canada director for Human Rights Watch, says the 58-country Declaration Against Arbitrary Detention in State-to-State Relations that Canada launched Monday is a good and necessary initiative.
But Deif says the federal government’s decision not to pursue the repatriation of 46 Canadians — 25 of them children as young as two years old — from a squalid refugee camp in northern Syria simply undercuts the intent of the new declaration.