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Ottawa Drops "No Apology, No Compensation" Hard Line

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  • Ottawa Drops "No Apology, No Compensation" Hard Line

    OTTAWA DROPS "NO APOLOGY, NO COMPENSATION" HARD LINE
    Jack Aubry, Vancouver Sun

    Vancouver Sun , Canada
    June 3 2007

    OTTAWA - The Harper government has quietly dropped the previous Liberal
    regime's "no apology, no compensation" hard-line in negotiations with
    ethnic groups seeking redress for past wrongs despite warnings that
    it would open the door to a possible flurry of claims.

    In government documents obtained by CanWest News Service through the
    Access to Information Act, the federal government was recently advised
    that the new approach "may advance calls for apologies/redress" and
    that there was the "potential for other presently unknown communities
    to seek recognition."

    The briefing notes state that there were already three agreements
    in principle with representatives of the Chinese-Canadian,
    Ukrainian-Canadian and Italian-Canadian communities under the
    now-defunct Liberal program.

    "A number of other communities are known to have been impacted
    by wartime measures and/or immigration restrictions including:
    Austro-Hungarians, Bulgarians, Croatians, Doukhobors, Germans,
    Hutterites, Indo-Canadians, Jews, Mennonites, Turks, etc..." says
    the briefing under the heading Other Impacted Communities.

    In an interview with CanWest News Service, Jason Kenney, secretary
    of state for multicultural and Canadian identity, said the terms and
    conditions of the Community Historical Recognition Program (CHRP)
    are still being finalized and will be made public "fairly soon"
    once the details are worked out completely.

    He acknowledged that the "no apology, no compensation" policy of the
    previous government has been dropped by the Harper government as it
    picks up where former prime minister Brian Mulroney left off in 1988
    with the Japanese-Canadian redress case that involved a full apology
    and a $422-million compensation package.

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper apologized about a year ago to Chinese
    Canadians for the country's racist immigration policies of the past,
    including the head tax once charged by the federal government to
    newly arriving immigrants from China. Survivors or their surviving
    conjugal partners have been offered each $20,000 "symbolic payments."

    The documents indicate that of the 43 applicants received since by
    the federal government, 36 "head-tax" survivors have been paid.

    The payments come out of the Harper government's $24-million CHRP,
    which drops the Martin government's "no apology, no compensation"
    policy that was part of its "never implemented" Acknowledgment,
    Commemoration and Education (ACE) program.

    Under the Conservative government, talks are progressing towards
    redress announcements with Italian-Canadians for the internment of
    about 700 men during the Second World War and Ukrainian-Canadians for
    government actions during the First World War, when about 5,000 were
    interned while land and other assets were expropriated.

    As well, consultations and a report by Conservative MP Jim Abbott,
    who is parliamentary secretary to Canadian Heritage Minister Bev Oda,
    have been completed for the government on the Komagata Maru ship
    incident in 1914 which saw 376 Sikhs, Muslims and Hindus forced back
    to sea by a Canadian warship at Vancouver harbour.

    The Indo-Canadian community has long advocated for a formal apology
    and commemoration of what happened to the passengers aboard the ship.

    However, Abbott reportedly advised the government "there was no
    consensus or agreement" on the issue of a formal public apology.

    While some of its critics have called it electioneering, the
    Conservatives have taken many steps over their past 18 months in
    power to strengthen ties with Canada's ethno-cultural communities.

    Harper has publicly recognized the Armenian genocide, launched an
    inquiry into the Air India tragedy, reduced the immigrant landing
    fee, and oversaw the transportation of Lebanese-Canadians back to
    Canada. This included the prime minister using his airplane to safely
    bring back a plane load of those escaping the region.

    The documents say the Conservatives have also created a new four-year
    $10-million National Historical Recognition Program to "provide a
    federal government narrative that presents an objective point of
    view on the history linked to wartime measures and/or immigration
    restrictions."

    It will include the creation of educational material, including
    "Historica Minutes" ads on past wrongs, an interactive website as
    well as commemoration and exhibits informing the public about the
    injustices.

    Kenney said major features of the Chinese-Canadian redress settlement
    were the apology issued by Harper and the $20,000 symbolic payments.

    "In a legal sense, we wouldn't call it compensation but in a symbolic
    sense it is a form of tangible (financial) redress," said Kenney.

    "But at the end of the day, this is symbolic because you can't go
    back in time and take away people's pain and suffering. All you can
    do as a government is demonstrate through meaningful symbolic actions
    serious regret for what happened in the past."

    He added that Canadians should not be made to feel "culpable" for
    "occasional racist policies" committed by their ancestors and which
    the country's modern democratic system would no longer tolerate.

    "I shouldn't be made to feel culpable for what my great-grandparents
    may have thought, say about Asian immigration. But the Canadian state
    has a responsibility to face up to those moments in our history when
    we allowed unjust policies to focus on particular ethnic communities,"
    said Kenney.

    Kenney said the previous government's policy of refusing to apologize
    or compensate was holding up redress negotiations. He said one of the
    effects of the slow talks under the Liberals was the gradual dying
    off of survivors.

    "That was exactly our sense of urgency when it came to the
    Chinese-Canadian redress package. There were very few, only a few
    dozen actual taxpayers left. If you are going to do redress, it has
    to actually be experienced by the victims of previous injustices,"
    Kenney said.

    http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/story.ht ml?id=74eecb25-f944-463b-958a-1a7937c606c5&k=6 5329
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