:
I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 69 of the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Development.
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format pursuant to the House order of June 23, 2022. Members are attending in person in the room, as well as using the Zoom application.
I'd like to make a few comments for the benefit of the witnesses and members.
Please wait until I recognize you by name before speaking. For those participating by video conference, please click on your microphone icon to activate your mike, and please mute yourselves when you are not speaking.
Interpretation for those on Zoom is at the bottom of your screen. You have a choice of either floor, English or French audio. For those in the room, you can use the earpiece and select the desired channel.
In accordance with our routine motion, I am informing the committee that all witnesses have completed the required connection tests.
Now, pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) of the motion adopted by the committee on Wednesday, September 21, 2022, the committee resumes its study of Canada's sanctions regime.
It is my great pleasure to welcome as witnesses before our committee, first of all, Mr. Brandon Silver, who I suspect is well known to you all, the director of policy and projects at the Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights. He is joining us by video conference. We also have witnesses from the Canadian Bankers Association. We have Stephen Alsace, global head of economic sanctions at the Royal Bank of Canada, and Ms. Angelina Mason, general counsel and vice-president, legal and risk, from the Canadian Bankers Association.
Each of you will be provided five minutes for your opening remarks, after which we will open the floor to members so they can ask you questions.
We will go with Mr. Silver first.
You have five minutes. Once you're getting very close, I'll put this up. We would be grateful if you could attempt, to the best of your abilities, to conclude your remarks.
Mr. Silver, the floor is yours.
:
Thank you, Chairman Ehsassi.
Honourable members, it's a pleasure and privilege to see so many friends and familiar faces. I bring warm regards from honourable Professor Irwin Cotler, who regrets he couldn't be with you today, but very much endorses the content of our centre's submission.
[Translation]
Thank you for the opportunity to join you today. I am pleased to testify as a lawyer and director of policy and projects at the Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights.
Our organization is very engaged in the development and implementation of Canada's sanctions regime. We also manage a global coalition of almost 400 civil society organizations that act to call for sanctions and promote human rights.
[English]
Canada can be a global leader in safeguarding dignity and democracy by strengthening the use of targeted sanctions. This committee's study presents a most propitious opportunity to chart such a path forward.
It is especially timely, as Putin's illegal and unjustified aggression against Ukraine is giving violent expression to a broader authoritarian assault on the rules-based order and those who seek to defend it.
Targeted sanctions have proven to be a powerful tool in pushing back. The visa bans, asset seizures and business dealing prohibitions that these sanctions entail are isolating the architects of repression, turning them into global pariahs and cutting them off from the financial flows that fund their oppression.
These sanctions are also protecting Canadian sovereignty from the corrosive effects of corrupt foreign capital and from the rights abuses of those who would seek to co-opt and undermine our democracy and financial institutions. It therefore ensures that our markets and our economy are not contributing to these abuses or acts of aggression abroad.
Honourable members, these are all measurable successes. Indeed, Canada's adoption in 2017 of our Magnitsky law was a game-changer. It lowered the implementing threshold for autonomous sanctions from a “grave breach of international peace and security that [has] resulted or is likely to result in a serious international crisis” to now also include gross and systematic human rights violations and acts of corruption.
Accordingly, our centre uses the term “Magnitsky sanctions” to refer to actions taken pursuant to these post-2017 lower thresholds under both the Justice for Victims of Corrupt Foreign Officials Act and SEMA.
With these measurements and new thresholds, out of the over 2,000 targeted sanctions that have been implemented since the adoption of the Magnitsky law in 2017, 482 of these are Magnitsky-style sanctions for human rights abuses and corruption. Out of roughly 35 Magnitsky jurisdictions, this makes Canada a leader in Magnitsky implementation, a close second to the United States and far ahead of every other jurisdiction. That's all the more admirable when you consider that we have a fraction of their resources.
However, with that being said, Magnitsky decisions are overwhelmingly undertaken unilaterally and without structured co-operation amongst allies, despite the shared interests, values and threats we all may be seeking to address. In a practical way, this can result in asset flight, with a sanctioned individual laundering their ill-gotten gains and conducting their business in another parallel jurisdiction upon being sanctioned in Canada. It also lessens the significant rhetorical and reputational value, as the listing can be presented as a singular aberration amongst more reasonable democracies, rather than an achievement in the pursuit of justice and accountability.
Therefore, the Wallenberg Centre suggests that an international contact group of jurisdictions with the Magnitsky law be established, which would greatly assist with the coordination and multilateralization of sanctions implementation while also creating a forum for the sharing of best practices.
As well, Canada should take a whole-of-government approach to sanctions and create a single focal point to ensure interdepartmental co-operation and co-operation amongst allies internationally. This is well grounded in parallel precedent. If you look at the U.S., with the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control, at the U.K., at the State Department's special envoy on sanctions, I think there are a lot of great models that we can be following internationally to ensure that we continue to lead.
We could assume a leadership role and unique convening capacity internationally to make sure that Canada's sanctions policies advance our foreign policy priorities. For example, we can use sanctions to give teeth to our leadership in advancing the Declaration Against Arbitrary Detention in State-to-State Relations, and thereby shift the calculus in hostage-taking.
We can also, at a time when the rules-based international order is under assault and multilateral institutions are being undermined, use our sanctions regime to show our confidence in these institutions and the enforceability of these international norms by using decisions of UN special procedures like the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, or international treaty monitoring mechanisms like the Committee Against Torture, as the basis for the implementation of sanctions.
I will conclude with this, honourable members. An especially important refinement to our sanctions frameworks would enshrine the crucial oversight role of all of you here today. Ultimately, some of the most impactful precedents and policies have been proposed by civil society and pursued by Parliament. Formalizing this relationship would only strengthen it.
Our centre's written evidence to the committee elaborates upon these proposals, in particular the final one drawing upon existing parliamentary precedent and practice like Order Paper questions, tabling public petitions and the like. We'd be pleased to discuss these with you either in the Q and A or in greater depth separately from this committee hearing.
I'd like to conclude by thanking all of you for your important work in guiding Canadian foreign policy, and for the opportunity and privilege to testify before your committee today.
Thank you.
:
Thank you for inviting the Canadian Bankers Association and the Royal Bank of Canada to appear this morning to participate in the committee's review of Canada's sanctions regime.
My name is Angelina Mason and I am the general counsel and senior vice-president, legal and risk, with the CBA. I am joined today by Stephen Alsace, global head, economic sanctions, with the Royal Bank of Canada.
Recent proposed legislative changes and federal budgetary commitments in the sanctions space highlight the federal government's continued commitment to the laudable policy goals that drive the regime, which are the safeguarding of human rights, combatting significant corruption, and preserving international peace and security.
Banks operating in Canada have invested heavily in their efforts to comply with and thus enable the evolving regime. Our members work extensively with Global Affairs Canada and the RCMP to ensure broad compliance with sanctions requirements. They also have in place systems and procedures for managing sanctions risk, and they conduct active screening against sanctions lists.
The government provides valuable support for this work. We appreciate GAC's consolidated Canadian autonomous sanctions list, the increasing willingness of GAC officials to engage with stakeholders, including our members, on sanctions matters, and their efforts to perform public outreach. Further, the federal government's announced investment of $76 million in GAC's development of a devoted sanctions bureau and additional support for the RCMP is an important initial step towards ensuring the growing regime is properly resourced to function effectively and efficiently.
Given their role within the global financial system, our members have observed several ways in which Canada's sanctions regime should continue to evolve. Primarily, as the regime continues to evolve and become more complex—including with the recent proposal of deemed control provisions that contain highly subjective elements in Bill —there is a need for written, publicly available guidance.
This need is well understood. It was highlighted by this committee's 2017 report, as well as in the Senate Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Trade's recently published report detailing its review of the regime. It is also common practice for sanctions authorities in other jurisdictions, such as the United Kingdom and the United States, and in other regulatory contexts within Canada.
To address this need and align with international and domestic best practices, we encourage GAC to develop this written guidance in consultation with stakeholders. Guidance will provide clarity and transparency for stakeholders—especially those that lack or cannot afford access to expensive resources to support their activities—thus mitigating the operation and regulatory risks that may flow from regulatory opacity when doing business globally. It will also help to ensure that the Sergei Magnitsky Law and SEMA are implemented as intended and that their desired policy goals are efficient and effective.
Along with written guidance—as endorsed by the Senate committee report—the government should also work to educate the Canadian public on the nature, rationale and impact of Canada's sanctions laws. In the current context, private sector entities, such as our members, are often required to address the questions and concerns of their clients. To ensure that the public receives accurate, up-to-date information that is consistent, we suggest that the federal government would be best placed to answer these questions, as our members and other stakeholders are still trying to understand the impact of the law on their own businesses.
There is also currently an opportunity to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of sanctions reporting. More specifically, our members currently provide sanctions reports to various government agencies. The government's recent proposed amendments in Bill to create additional reporting requirements to FINTRAC open the door for meaningful engagement between the regulator and industry to refine reporting requirements and ensure they meet the policy intent of the legislative amendments.
Operationally, the permit system also requires the federal government's attention. We understand that in other jurisdictions there are streamlined mechanisms for seeking permits or certificates to authorize certain specified activities or transactions that are otherwise prohibited. For example, the United States has provisions for general licences that authorize particular types of transactions for a class of persons, without the need to apply for a specific licence. This general approach has not been used in Canada, although it is possible under the law.
Given the lack of guidance and clarity in the law, we understand that GAC has been flooded by permit applications. It appears this increased volume has created a backlog of applications, leaving Canadians waiting with unclear timelines for formal responses. These permits are not always sought by large corporations. Often, it is everyday Canadians seeking these permits, such as retail banking clients attempting to remit funds to family members in jurisdictions impacted by sanctions.
We suggest that GAC align with the approach taken in foreign jurisdictions. Further, we also recommend that GAC hire additional resources to focus specifically on licence applications and, ideally, set out a mandate to complete all licence requests within a reasonable period.
Finally, as the Senate report recommends, sufficient investment in GAC’s sanctions bureau and other federal departments involved in the regime is needed. We appreciate and support the government’s previous budgetary commitments to GAC and understand the government is considering providing additional government agencies with a role in the sanctions space.
Given the complexity of the regime, it is critical that any government department or agency involved in the regime, including GAC, be properly resourced and that staff receive extensive training on and have sufficient knowledge of this highly technical area of the law.
This approach will help ensure oversight is tailored to and reflects the uniqueness of the regime and that it is not conflated with that of other legislative areas, such as Canada’s anti-money laundering—
:
Thank you, Mr. Hoback, for your kind words and important questions.
If we look at Magnitsky multilateralization, it's the idea that with imposing sanctions, the asset freezes and visa bans should ideally be coordinated among multiple jurisdictions with parallel laws. If we sanction an individual in Canada and we are the only country to do so, they can easily make use of parallel banking systems—the very same amenities and rights that they seek to deny their compatriots at home—and enjoy those rights abroad.
The statistics in Canada are that 79% of our sanctions are unilateral. That means that most of the sanctions we're implementing are undertaking important components of naming and shaming and protecting our domestic financial systems and democracy from being co-opted or abused by foreign nationals or entities engaging in maligned behaviour, but doing so is less effective because they can go to the U.K., the U.S., the EU or any of the other 30-odd Magnitsky jurisdictions.
With respect to the 21% of Canadian sanctions that are multilateralized—i.e. involving not just us—we usually do those with only one partner, so they're not very broad or multilateral. When we say that we're not engaging unilaterally, we're really usually doing so only bilaterally, so Canada will make an announcement with the U.K. or with the U.S. or with the EU. Of that 21% of multilateralized sanctions, 14% are bilateral, meaning that only a couple per cent of Canada's sanctions are truly global in reach and scale.
That is in a bit of a nexus with our recommendation to create this diplomatic coordination group. If Canada is engaging in a concerted and coordinated effort to share intelligence, to share Magnitsky implementation and diplomatic action with like-minded states, we can really tighten the screws and increase the pressure on rights abusers both reputationally and rhetorically—because it would be multiple democracies sanctioning them—but also substantively in terms of depriving them of the ability to access the vacations or the universities that their families often seek to use, as well as the banking sector, markets and economies in Canada, the U.S. and the U.K. If we're acting concertedly, we can be far more impactful.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I thank the witnesses for joining us today.
Canada and its allies have imposed unprecedented sanctions on Russia, affecting almost every aspect of its economy. Our objective is very clear: to limit Russia's access to funding.
There is one sanction that I find very interesting: The main Russian banks have been removed from the international financial transfer network, SWIFT. I would like to hear the witnesses' comments, especially those from the Canadian Bankers Association, on this point in particular.
[English]
Ms. Mason, perhaps I'll begin with you on the SWIFT sanctions that Canada imposed with our allies. Mr. Silver just noted the importance of working with multiple allies. In the case of SWIFT, we worked with a number of important allies in order to get that done. I wonder if you could speak a bit from your perspective as to the effectiveness of those SWIFT sanctions.
Mr. Chair and members, effectively, we're removing some of the largest Russian banks from SWIFT. It has choked off any transactions. Most of the Canadian banks no longer have direct access to Russia in terms of facilitating payments. It's had a good effect in the sense that it has denied some of the largest banks, like VEB, VTB and Sberbank access to western capital, but it has had unintended consequences for ordinary Canadians, and that's part of the reason for a lot of the permit applications to Global Affairs Canada.
Ordinary Canadians are no longer able to easily send money—like remittances for child support, for example—to Russia, or to receive pension payments. Or, in the case of hockey players who are playing in North America, if their employer happens to be owned by a sanctioned entity, their payroll has been cut off. That's one of the results that has occurred.
One other point that I'll also make with respect to Mr. Silver's remarks is that although we are very supportive of the Magnitsky sanctions and we agree that greater coordination is important, most of the large Canadian banks have international operations. For us, for example, we have to comply with sanctions requirements in the United States, in the EU and in the U.K. and other jurisdictions. Although it's not written into our law here in Canada, we also honour other jurisdictions in which we operate.
:
Thank you for the question, Mr. Garon. That is an important point.
The data that our centre has submitted to the committee is the result of the amendments made to the Special Economic Measures Act in the context of human rights and the fight against corruption.
The Magnitsky Act has been used a little over 60 times. However, the amendments to the Special Economic Measures Act that the Magnitsky Act led to have made our sanctions regime much clearer and more definitive in the fight against human rights violations and corruption.
[English]
The numbers that we submitted, the 482, are those that would have been possible only post 2017. Before then, the threshold for sanctions was a grave breach of international peace and security that has resulted in or is likely to result in an international crisis. That threshold change has allowed for a much more expansive use of sanctions that we think are rather timely given the global resurgence of authoritarianism, of neo-liberal populism and of acts of aggression. The fact that those laws were changed accordingly is incredibly important.
The disuse of the Magnitsky law as it is, as opposed to the lower thresholds under the Special Economic Measures Act, is an interesting question that we explore in greater depth in our written submissions to the committee. It's our assertion that this is an issue of rhetoric rather than substance. The laws are largely parallel. There are some minor distinctions between them—you know, the allowance for a sanctioning of entities under SEMA, but only of individuals under the Magnitsky act—but by and large, we actually call for, because of this, a shift in the use of language in order to allow for better coordination among our allies and to make use of the important resonance that the word “Magnitsky” has, such that we call both SEMA and Magnitsky law implementation for human rights and anti-corruption “Magnitsky laws”.
:
That's exactly what we envision, Ms. McPherson, and we elaborated upon it somewhat in our written submission.
If you look at parallel jurisdictions, you see that there is a department with an interdepartmental responsibility for coordination, such as OFAC in the U.S., or the U.K.'s newly established office. There's an opportunity for Canada to do the same.
The budget implementation act announced the allocation of $75 million...the creation of a financial crime task force. There's an opportunity there, perhaps, for this task force to have an interdepartmental coordination opportunity, but also one internationally. When our allies are talking to us on sanctions matters, it seems to largely be ad hoc and subject specific, rather than comprehensive and multilateral.
Having a focal point can assist with that broader coordination and with coordination internally among the myriad and often regrettably disparate and siloed government departments, whether it be FINTRAC, RCMP, CSIS, the Department of Justice, GAC and the like. Having that main focal point both within Canada domestically and for our allies internationally can help streamline things and address some of the issues.
Fellow witnesses from the Canadian Bankers Association have addressed them, and in particular, because of the diffuse nature of engagements, the gathering of data has fallen to civil society. I mentioned at the outset of my remarks that we co-chair a group of about 400 major international NGOs working on sanctions, and the data and metrics I shared with you earlier were largely compiled by civil society, because we've had to fill the void that should largely be filled by government. The government should be tracking these numbers and using them as a means of refining their actions.
If I could, I'll use the remainder of my answer time, Ms. McPherson, on Vladimir Kara-Murza's case, because you've been a leader on this case in an all-party way. I know that Mr. Garon and his colleague joined in calling for freedom for Vladimir Kara-Murza. I was referencing in my response earlier that that's a good example of where we sometimes can't coordinate with allies, but we lead. Canada sanctioned all those involved in this case, and then advocated for our allies to do the same. It was one of those rare instances where both the U.S. Department of Treasury and the U.K. sanctioned the Kara-Murza case, and both of them in their public statements said they were following Canada's lead.
That's one of those times where unilateral action helped, combined with multilateral advocacy. Canada took the lead, and all of our allies followed.
:
That's an immensely important question. We're in Parliament advocating for honorary citizenship for Vladimir, because we believe that would offer a life-saving protective cover.
He has written from prison mentioning that.... As an aside, it shows the effectiveness of targeted sanctions. His jailers were the same people who tried to assassinate him twice. He miraculously survived, and they have not tried to assassinate him a third time, because they know the world is watching and cares, and those sanctions have helped in this case.
There's a risk of that attention waning. The acts of aggression and global crises may be shifting. We need to show that we continue to support this expression of Canadian values for someone who testified before this committee and helped make our country's foreign policy more effective and humane. By adopting the very sanctions we're discussing today, he deserves our solidarity and support just as a matter of shared values, let alone for the life-saving actions it will give him.
The jailers in his prison have often said to him, and he's written about this from prison, “Please make sure we're not included in Magnitsky sanctions. Please make sure we're not referenced in international statements.” Those who are holding his life in their hands are watching what this Parliament does. Adopting a motion by unanimous consent to accord him honorary citizenship may very well help save his life, and will certainly be an expression of what this Parliament stands for.
:
Welcome back, everyone. We'll now resume our study of the sanctions regime.
It is my great pleasure to welcome several witnesses before our committee. We have, as individuals, Ms. Anaïs Kadian, an attorney; Ms. Erica Moret, senior researcher and coordinator of the sanctions and sustainable peace hub, Geneva Graduate Institute; and Mr. Zaw Kyaw, spokesman for the government in exile of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar.
Witnesses, I should let each of you know that you get five minutes for your opening remarks. After having heard from you, we will open it to the members for questions.
Ms. Kadian, we will first go with you. You have five minutes.
Honourable members of the committee, good afternoon. Thank you for inviting me to appear before you today.
My name is Anaïs Kadian. I'm a lawyer specializing in civil and commercial litigation in Montreal. I also have an undergraduate degree in international studies. More recently, I have spoken out with other lawyers and professionals in support of human rights in the heartbreaking situation of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh.
Not too long ago, two of our briefs were submitted to the committee. One is about the review of export permits to Turkey, and the other concerns the status of Nagorno-Karabakh under international law.
[English]
Today I would like to speak about the report prepared by the civil society network Hayren Partners for Humanity, which was submitted to this committee. It covers the important opportunity Canada has to respond concretely to the human rights crisis created in Nagorno-Karabakh through targeted economic sanctions against the Azerbaijani regime.
Since this committee’s motion was to “review the need for new recommendations...resulting from Canada’s response to the situation in Ukraine and other situations since 2017”, Nagorno-Karabakh is one of these other situations where new recommendations should be made to Canada’s response.
In fact, the lack of concrete measures, such as sanctions, has unfortunately only served to embolden the Azerbaijani authoritarian regime to continue violating international law and human rights without impediment.
Some recent examples include capturing and torturing Armenian prisoners of war in the fall of 2022, as reported by Human Rights Watch; continuing to hold over 100 prisoners of war and subjecting them to inhumane treatment; continually attacking and killing civilians in border villages and in Karabakh on an almost weekly basis; illegally attacking Armenia last fall, leading to hundreds of deaths and the seizure of 140 square kilometres of sovereign territory; and illegally blocking the Lachin corridor, chokeholding 120,000 indigenous ethnic Armenians from the outside world since last December.
Genocide Watch has qualified the blockade of the Lachin corridor as “a clear attempt by the Azerbaijani government to starve, freeze, and ultimately expel Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh.”
The Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention issued red flag alerts for genocide, stating, “The responsibility for this humanitarian crisis lies solely with the Azerbaijani state and particularly with the regime of President Ilham Aliyev.”
In February 2023, the International Court of Justice ordered Azerbaijan to take all measures to ensure unimpeded movement through the Lachin corridor. Azerbaijan has ignored this order. It remains in blatant violation of the ICJ's decisions to this day.
These human rights and international violations fall squarely in those covered by section 4 of Canada's SEMA and also warrant the application of Canada's Magnitsky law.
The call for sanctions against Azerbaijan has also recently been made by the following government bodies and officials: the European Parliament, in March 2023, which called on the council to impose targeted sanctions against Azerbaijan officials for not respecting the International Court of Justice’s order; the chairman of the U.S. Senate's Foreign Relations Committee, in May; the French Senate and the French National Assembly; and the ambassador from Armenia to Canada, who gave evidence to this very committee in January. Genocide Watch and the Lemkin Institute have also called for sanctions against the Azerbaijani regime officials.
Similarly, this committee should recommend the imposition of targeted sanctions on the Azerbaijani regime in order to uphold human rights, international law and justice. Canada's laws allow it to apply specific actions in a balanced manner, while still maintaining diplomatic relations. Without accountability, there's no justice, and without justice there can be no peace.
[Translation]
Canada has repeatedly affirmed its commitment to promoting international justice and respect for human rights. I think Canadians expect Canada to set an example to protect the rights of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia, as it does in similar contexts.
I applaud the hard but crucial work of this committee, which has committed to studying these and other issues in order to review Canada's application of the sanctions regime.
Thank you for your attention, and I remain available for any questions you may have.
Mr. Chair, vice-chairs and standing committee members, my name is Zaw Kyaw. I am a Myanmar Canadian living in Canada since 1991.
During Myanmar's brief democratization period, I worked as a CEO in the most successful special economic zone in Myanmar. Currently I am acting as a spokesperson for the national unity government of Myanmar.
I am honoured to have this opportunity to appear as a witness in view of the committee's study of Canada's sanctions regime, particularly on Burma/Myanmar.
On the morning of February 1, 2021, the Myanmar military launched an attempted coup against the democratically elected government, halting the country's fragile transition towards democracy.
Following the coup, the people of Myanmar took to the streets for mass peaceful protests. The military responded with deadly violence, killed many people and imposed a campaign of terror, raiding homes and arresting anyone suspected of supporting democracy.
Faced with defiant and widespread resistance to date, the military has been unable to consolidate its control of the country. It has deployed increasingly brutal violence to crush opposition, but the people's resistance is still strong and growing.
Since the military coup, over 3,600 civilians have been killed, nearly 23,000 have been arbitrarily detained, and over 60,000 properties, including religious facilities, hospitals and schools, have been burned down. Over 1.7 million internally displaced people have been reported across the country.
Canada has shown no hesitation in taking action against the Myanmar military. In December 2007, the special economic measures (Burma) regulations came into force in response to the humanitarian and human rights crisis situation in Myanmar/Burma. Canada's sanctions were one of the toughest sanctions regimes at that time.
Following positive developments in Myanmar, Canada eased its economic sanctions in April 2012; however, Canada still maintained sanctions against certain listed individuals and entities, as well as an arms embargo.
The regulations were amended in 2018 to add seven senior military officials who occupied positions of authority during the military clearance operations against the Rohingya in Rakhine state.
Canada was among the first countries to impose new sanctions in light of the February 1, 2021 coup. Since then, Canada has imposed additional sanctions six times, resulting in sanctions on a total of 95 individuals and 63 entities. Canada is the first country to impose sanctions on Myanmar military jet fuel suppliers.
Despite the sanctions from Canada and the west, the Myanmar military is still capable of increasing its terror acts against civilians. Their foreign partners and new corporate fronts are easily able to skirt the existing sanctions.
In September 2022, the Myanmar junta shut down public access to the Myanmar Companies Online, or MyCO, corporate registry in order to shield the shareholders' information and to hide newly established front companies. This demonstrates the need to strengthen the current sanctions regime.
While I believe the sanctions are a useful tool to pressure the brutal military, there is also room to improve Canada's sanctions regimes on Myanmar to make it more robust and effective.
Yesterday, Nikkei issued a report that Russian repurchased parts for tanks and missiles, which had been exported to Myanmar and India, would be used by Russia in Ukraine. The Myanmar military is now a threat to global security. Canada and the west must coordinate to target arms suppliers and brokers.
Canada has to target aviation fuel suppliers. Canada needs to coordinate with allies to plan protection and indemnity clubs, or P and I clubs, from providing insurance to any vessels carrying aviation fuel to Myanmar ports.
Canada and democratic countries could strengthen sanctions to choke off dollars to the military by targeting the junta's foreign revenue flows, such as the Myanma Foreign Trade Bank, or MFTB, and the Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise, or MOGE.
I am very much concerned about the purchase of Chevron's stake in Yadana offshore gas, of which Chevron owns 41%, by the Canadian entity MTI Energy's subsidiary, a little-known company called Et Martem Holdings. By the way, the Yadana gas field is the largest gas field in Myanmar.
I would be happy to discuss it further. Thank you so much for giving me the opportunity.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Chair and distinguished members of the committee, thank you for the opportunity to testify today.
I've been working on multilateral and autonomous sanctions for 20 years or so. During this time I've explored questions of the impacts, effectiveness and coordination of sanctions regimes, such as those targeting Russia, Syria, Afghanistan, Iran, North Korea and so on.
I've also researched sanctions in relation to areas such as chemical weapons abuses, nuclear non-proliferation, cybersecurity, modern slavery and human trafficking, and humanitarian considerations. I also coordinate several multi-stakeholder initiatives on sanctions on behalf of the European Union, the Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs and the United Nations. In recent years, I've also provided testimony on sanctions to the U.S. Congress, both U.K. Houses of Parliament, the Canadian Senate and the European Parliament.
In 2020, I provided research and strategic policy advice to Global Affairs Canada's new sanctions unit, including a suggested checklist for sanctions design and a blueprint for areas where Canada could play a positive leadership role in global sanctions fora, drawing on its unique position in the world. I'll draw on this work today, as well as the testimony I provided to the Canadian Senate in December 2022.
I'd like to share reflections today on just two key areas that I feel most qualified to talk about and that relate to recommendations this committee made in April 2017 as part of Canada's parliamentary review on Canadian sanctions, which led to Global Affairs Canada being afforded stronger capabilities and more flexibility in the area of autonomous sanctions.
The first area is the recommendation to “properly resource and reform the structures responsible for [Canada's] sanctions regimes”.
An earlier criticism was that the Canadian government didn't have adequate resources to implement and enforce an effective sanctions regime or to allow for independent oversight of Canada's sanctions procedures. Important steps appear to have happened in the right direction in recent years through the establishment of the sanctions policy and operations coordination division, with stepped-up resourcing and legislative reforms. From my experience, this is staffed by extremely dedicated, expert and hard-working officials, who have adapted well to the fast-changing global sanctions landscape.
In response to earlier critiques over difficulties in navigating sanctions lists, Global Affairs Canada now has consolidated autonomous and UN sanctions lists on its website, and other sites also provide useful information on sanctions resources, such as that contained on the Parliament of Canada site. As I understand it, regular reviews are conducted, and Canada has also contributed to a number of detailed studies and tools that help aid sanctions design, both within Canada and globally.
Another notable change has been the rise in Canada's prominence in autonomous sanctions practice, in close coordination with the EU, the U.K. and the U.S. in particular, alongside others. I see this as something of a positive step that responds to recommendations that closer collaboration was warranted. The formalization and streamlining of these types of collaboration, I would say, is a merit of Canada's involvement.
In light of this close work with international partners, I'd say that Canada's sanctions use is increasingly “plurilateral”, to borrow the term from the World Trade Organization, and really not particularly unilateral—as per some critiques of autonomous sanctions—with between 30 and 40 countries working together. Given the impasse we see today on sanctions at the UN Security Council, this allows Canada to join allies in addressing breaches of international law and to play something of a leadership role in international foreign and security policy. This also serves, of course, as a force multiplier by working together.
We also see formalization and other types of collaboration, such as through the Russian elites, proxies and oligarchs task force, which is a multilateral effort that has used information sharing and coordination to identify and exert pressure on sanctioned Russian individuals and entities. Canada is, of course, a member, alongside a number of other different countries and the European Commission.
An expansion in terms of staffing, training, capacity and resourcing appears to be warranted, in my view at least, not only in Canada but also elsewhere, considering the very steep rise in prominence of sanctions we're seeing across the world today, and particularly following Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
If we take a couple of examples from elsewhere, the U.K. sanctions unit has grown dramatically in recent times and is now sitting at around 160 individuals. The Netherlands has just seen the creation of and growth in its own sanctions unit. This has been happening elsewhere as well. This gives a kind of context in terms of the need for proper resourcing across the board of different areas.
I will make a very quick point to conclude in terms of the recommendation for Global Affairs Canada to provide comprehensive, publicly available written guidance to the public and private sectors regarding the interpretation of sanctions regulations in order to maximize compliance.
Canada, of course, lacks an investigative or enforcement body like OFAC in the U.S. Treasury. Alongside this, we know that Russia and other actors are using sophisticated evasion and circumvention techniques in coordination with other sanctions targets, particularly DPRK, Iran and so on, so enforcement has now become the name of the game. I think we can learn some lessons from what other countries are doing.
We have seen the U.S. Treasury working together with the U.K. Treasury to develop common approaches in terms of enforcement and investigative powers. We also see the EU and U.S.—
I want to move on to another witness, but perhaps you could provide some follow-up written information with specific names, specific individuals and specific institutions that you think should be sanctioned with that particular goal in mind.
Mr. Kyaw, it seems clear from your testimony that the sanctions that have thus far been implemented against Burma have been ineffective.
I wonder if you would agree with that characterization and if you can share a bit more, specifically about how we can close the gaps through our sanctions regime.
Also, if there's time, could you also speak to collaboration between the military junta and Russia, and how gaps in sanctions may be a mechanism by which certain materials are making their way to Russia and being used in the invasion of Ukraine?
:
I just want to point out that the national unity government is not an exiled government. Actually, the acting president, the prime minister and many of the ministers are working inside Myanmar. Also, the national unity government...even though NUG members are included, NUG members are minorities. About 46% are NUG members, and over 50% are representing different ethnic groups. There are the NGO groups, as well.
The acting president is a Kachin ethnic minority, a Christian, and then also the prime minister is a Karen ethnic.
To answer your questions, the national unity government's minister of human rights presented a paper to the UN Human Rights Council. Also, the national unity government released a Rohingya policy paper that clearly sets out recognition of the citizenship rights of the Rohingya and their dignified return to their villages and homes.
Rohingya representation in the NUG is a work in progress. Another thing is the indiscriminate citizenship law. That's a law that discriminates against the Rohingya and other ethnic minorities. The NUG made the decision to repeal and replace it with a more democratic and internationally acceptable law.
Those are the biggest things that the national unity government is working on. For example, right now, cyclone Mocha landed in Rakhine state. Most of the casualties are Rohingya refugees. Also, we are supporting those refugees through the local civil society, and this is how our government works for equality and self-determination, including for the Rohingya.
:
Thank you very much for the question.
[English]
This is a challenge that's faced by all those who are making use of sanctions autonomously, and also in the United Nations as well. Mechanisms or tools to assess the effectiveness and impacts are not very well developed yet.
Nevertheless, there are methodologies out there that could be adapted, should those states wish to do so. In the absence of this, it's quite hard, with any confidence, to make an accurate assessment of the impacts of the sanctions.
As an aside, it's also incredibly difficult to do, methodologically, when it comes to proving causation over correlation, because there are so many complicated factors going on in any one context, particularly those where there is an armed conflict under way, or in the context of humanitarian emergencies as well.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and thanks to all of our witnesses for being here.
Ms. Moret, I'm going to continue on with the questions my colleague was just asking you.
We've added a number of names to our sanctions list. As you mentioned in your testimony, the increase in the use of the sanctions mechanisms has skyrocketed around the world. Obviously, what's happening in Ukraine is the reason for that. Adding the names is not the same as enforcing the sanctions, and it's not as useful if we don't have those enforcement mechanisms.
In Canada, the RCMP has reported that approximately $136 million in assets have been frozen and $292 million in financial transactions have been blocked.
I'd like your perspective. How would you evaluate how we are doing with regard to enforcement? What are the exact key things we need to do to make sure that the enforcement of the sanctions is equal to adding names to lists of the sanctions?
:
I think it's a huge challenge elsewhere, not just in Canada.
First of all, Canada doesn't have the investigative or enforcement capabilities that the Office of Foreign Assets Control in the U.S. Treasury has. There, the staffing is in the hundreds of people, and the sophistication of the techniques they use has also been honed over many years.
I think that is the first point. Having the proper ability to conduct investigations and to engage in enforcement is critical. At the moment, I believe all of this—decisions on new sanctions and outreach to private sector investigations—is done by a small group within Global Affairs Canada. They simply can't do everything. I would say that really warrants some closer capacity if that is to change.
Another lesson is that working with partners is really key. It's not for no reason that we see the special envoys of the U.S. and the EU, Jim O’Brien and David O’Sullivan, working together to encourage third countries to clamp down on circumvention, or to not, at least, support evasion and so on. It is also key, working with international partners.
A final point I would make is that capacity in third countries is absolutely critical. Many of the countries you'd hope are helping not to fill gaps, or at least to help enforce sanctions, may be really lacking in capacity. That's not just in the government department, but also customs, the intelligence services, policing and so on.
There really need to be some very serious capacity-building efforts overseas that could be done collectively with other partners.
It sounds like what you're telling us is that there is some capacity building that needs to be done in Canada too, when you talk about hundreds of people working on this work, whereas I think we heard we had seven or 12, or some very small number working in Canada. I think resources are a key priority.
I'd like to ask a question of our witness from Myanmar, Burma, if I could.
You spoke a bit about the arms and the Myanmar military. Could you talk a bit about how Canada could better ensure that all arms, including Canadian parts and dual-use systems, don't make it into the hands of people or governments under sanctions?
:
Thank you, Chair, and I want to thank the witnesses for being here.
I am particularly concerned about what Ms. Moret has pointed out, even though it would seem to be difficult. If sanctions are going to work, have we...? We can't evaluate what the impact of it has been. It looks like in Myanmar we haven't changed anything. Really, things are worse.
Do we have indicators that we can use, for instance, to measure and look at how we're getting to where we want to go? What happens if you sanction the country and that country continues to escalate its behaviour against human rights, etc.? How do we know if that happens? How can we, for instance, look at loopholes? If we don't have indicators and we can't measure, we can spend tons and tons of money trying to do something that in fact has no impact.
Do you know any country that has developed at least a set of indicators or some form of benchmark measurements that we can use to at least, even if crudely, evaluate what's going on?
:
When it comes to your question on other countries, the key here is this: There are various initiatives under way in the U.S. and the EU, as far as I understand it. I know Canada is closely involved in some of those discussions, as well. I think that's a very positive thing.
With regard to your question on sanctions on countries serving as funnels, this is definitely being discussed elsewhere at the moment. That's the purpose of U.S. extraterritorial sanctions, of course, in many cases. It would probably be a big step forward for Canada to start entering into that terrain, given our long-standing opposition, alongside the EU, to those kinds of measures. At the same time, there are other ways, in my view, to work together with other countries to ensure circumvention and evasion are clamped down on.
Ultimately, with the idea of changing a behaviour.... That's something less likely to come about with sanctions. Constraining access to vital resources such as weapons, financing and so on is a much bigger success story for sanctions in many cases.
:
Absolutely. This is very much the focus of my work elsewhere.
The first point is to have regular interactions and dialogue in a way that can be done in a trusted forum where a common language is established, because it takes time. My experience has shown that it can take a number of years to build up the trust required for different sectors to communicate with one another effectively on these delicate topics. That's the first point. That can include representatives of groups of NGOs, as well, as a way of streamlining some of this type of interaction. The same should also apply, of course, to banks and the wider private sector in terms of things such as trade, global supply chains and so on, where Canada has played a role.
The second area is thinking about harnessing some of the technology. In Canada, you have a fantastic fintech sector and fantastic innovation. There is a lot that can be done to harness some of the positive sides of tech in terms of helping bring down due diligence obligations, increasing transparency and even facilitating humanitarian fund transfers and so on.
The third point is having a point of contact where NGOs, civil society and so on are able to get in touch when they have questions. It's the same for banks and so on, when the nature of commissionable activities isn't clear to them and where wording may not be clear and so on.
:
That concludes our questions.
Allow me to thank Ms. Kadian, Mr. Kyaw and Ms. Moret for their expertise. As you could tell from the members, your session here today was very helpful.
Before I adjourn, I want to let members know that today we will dispense with the 10 minutes of business for the committee, because everyone agreed to make some changes to the schedule.
It was agreed by all the members that for the remainder of this session we will be focused on the sanctions regime, with the exception of next Tuesday, when, for the first hour, we will be hearing from GAC officials regarding the Wagner Group. For the second hour, we will be hearing from the Lithuanian vice-minister of foreign affairs as part of our ongoing study on Ukraine. That's for next Tuesday.
Also, given the change in the schedule, we are now moving back the submission of recommended witnesses for the Wagner Group study to next Tuesday by the end of the day.
Does anyone have any questions? Is it all good?
The committee is adjourned.