:
Welcome to meeting 72 of the House of Commons 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 remotely using the Zoom application.
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Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted by the committee on Wednesday, September 21, 2022, the committee is resuming its study of Canada's sanctions regime.
It is now my great pleasure to welcome our first two witnesses. As an individual, we have Ms. Elisabeth Braw, senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. We also have, from the United Transitional Cabinet of Belarus, Mr. Vladzimir Astapenka, deputy representative for foreign affairs.
Each of you will be provided with five minutes for opening remarks, after which we will open it up to the members for any follow-up questions. I should add that, once we get very close to the time limit, I will hold up a card. That means you should be wrapping up as soon as possible. It doesn't just apply to your opening remarks; it's also when the members are asking you questions.
Madam Braw, we will start with you. You have five minutes. The floor is yours.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you to the committee for inviting me again to address the subject of sanctions.
I think what is so important to recognize now in the year 2023, when we are assessing the effect of the western collective sanctions, is how different the environment is today compared to the last round when we applied sanctions, or, I should say, in the last generation when we applied sanctions. That was during the Cold War, when we, the collective west, applied sanctions against countries like South Africa.
The reason we could successfully apply sanctions during the Cold War was that we, the collective west, were such a powerful economic force. That, of course, shifted with the end of the Cold War. The end of the Cold War delivered an incredible increase in globalized business.
That matters so much, because today when we apply sanctions, either as a deterrent or as a punishment, countries that aren't willing to toe the line with us, that don't support our use of sanctions, that are indifferent or that simply want to take advantage of another country's predicament because it is under sanctions are in a position to undermine our sanctions. I think that is the biggest challenge we face in administering our sanctions. Yes, we can do so, and we can be very meticulous in designing the sanctions, but there are always countries waiting around the corner to expand their trading relations—I'm talking about economic sanctions—with a country that is under sanctions.
That's what we are seeing, to such a large extent, happening with Russia. We are primarily seeing China increasingly expand its trading relations with Russia. However, it's not just China. India is doing the same. Other countries are doing the same. That, of course, has the effect that our sanctions are not as powerful as they would be if applied against a background of no other business activity with a sanctioned country.
That doesn't mean we shouldn't sanction countries, but we should bear in mind that the effectiveness of what we can do through economic sanctions is not what it was during the Cold War. It's not that we are not going to return to the sort of economic power we had during the Cold War any time in the near future. This is something we have to bear in mind with all sanctions we apply against Russia or any other misbehaving country today and in the near future.
Another thing to bear in mind is why we apply sanctions. Do we apply them as a deterrent or do we apply them as punishment? Of course, in the case that you're discussing in the committee—i.e. Russia—the west has been applying sanctions both as a deterrent and as a punishment.
Before the invasion of Ukraine, we applied sanctions against Russia to warn it against invading Ukraine. If it invaded Ukraine, our message was that there would be much stronger sanctions, and that's what we did. We imposed stronger sanctions, and it is phenomenal that the western alliance has stuck together in imposing those stronger sanctions.
The second main thing I'd like the committee to bear in mind is that sanctions are such an obvious instrument of deterrence and punishment that the leaders of a misbehaving country factor this punishment into their cost-benefit analyses when they consider whether to pursue the action that we, the west, are trying to deter. Russia and the Russian leadership had very clearly factored the risk of substantial devastating western sanctions into their cost-benefit analysis before invading Ukraine and decided they'd do it anyway. That is one of the really big challenges of sanctions. They are such a useful tool that they are still extremely predictable, and that makes them less powerful as a deterrent.
In connection with that, a really important thing to bear in mind is that the leaders of a country that has been put under sanctions—or that is about to be put under sanctions—may not care whether their country suffers as a result. I have found over the years that selfishness prevails everywhere. Leaders of countries will think first of themselves and second of their country. If we, the west, threaten to impose economic sanctions against Russia as a whole, it may not faze Vladimir Putin that much. It may not faze the leader of another country against which we threaten sanctions because they themselves don't suffer too much or they're willing to pay the price.
:
Good morning to you, Mr. Chair and all the members of the committee. I am appearing for the first time before this distinguished body, and I am very honoured to have such an opportunity.
I represent the United Transitional Cabinet of Belarus. It is a body established by the national leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya in August 2022 in order to represent, as we believe, the real national interests of Belarus.
Of course, it is widely known that, after the falsified presidential elections in August 2020, Lukashenko lost all legitimacy and the legal possibility of representing our country and people in the international arena. This election caused mass protests—which were peaceful, I should stress—in the streets of Minsk. These lasted about one year, I would say. All of those peaceful protests were brutally repressed by the cronies of Lukashenko, and thousands of people were arrested, tortured, disappeared and even killed. Those actions in autumn 2020 caused a modest reaction, I would say, in the international community, but I should stress that Canada was among the first countries to introduce personal sanctions against the regime of Lukashenko and those officials who were responsible for massive systematic violations of human rights.
Unfortunately, this didn't stop the dictator, who went on to the act of air piracy against an Irish civil jet flying from Athens to Vilnius. It's a well-known story from May 2021, when this jet was forced to land in Minsk and some opposition figures were arrested. That caused another round of sanctions, including sanctions on the part of Canada. I should stress, as well, that as with the first round, this one was coordinated with the European Union and the United States. That is a much more effective way of introducing sanctions against the regime of Lukashenko. Unfortunately, this has had little effect, I would say, on the behaviour of the regime, because it is still fighting against the protests felt all over the country of Belarus.
In response to the European sanctions, Lukashenko instrumentalized the migration crisis on the border of the European Union—on Belarus's borders with Poland, Lithuania and Latvia. Basically, this crisis is still going on. Daily, we have reports saying that 50, 100 or 150 illegal migrants are trying to cross the border between Belarus and Poland or other neighbouring countries. Again, there was another round of sanctions on the part of Canada and the European Union for this development.
Here we come to February 2022, when Putin and Russia invaded Ukraine. The main strike at that time came from the territory of Belarus. As you know, Lukashenko was complicit with Putin in this war of aggression and contributed, to the best of his capacity, to the movements of troops and to logistics, repairs, technical support and infrastructure.
Naturally, the western countries responded to this aggression with another round of sanctions. Belarus was included, but this time, we should admit, they were not that coordinated, since most of the sanctions applied to Russia but not to Belarus. That gave Lukashenko an additional chance to benefit from the situation. Some products that could not be directly supplied to Russia were supplied through Belarus.
I would share the view expressed earlier by the first witness that, indeed, neighbouring countries are trying to benefit from any loophole left in this sanctions regime, if it is not coordinated. In the global world, we believe that for the sanctions to be smart, they need to be coordinated. Otherwise we promote evasions of the sanctions; we promote black or grey schemes to provide the goods.
This is what is happening right now, in the post-Soviet space, when we have the figures for the exports or imports from such countries as Armenia, Kirghizia and Kyrgyzstan skyrocketing in respect of trade with Russia or trade with Belarus.
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There are many gaps, of course.
I should mention that the Lukashenko regime has been living under that level of sanctions, basically, since the beginning of the century, so they have their own know-how. They know much better than we do how to avoid the sanctions, including the special operations he made with the Russian products as well. It was a special changing of the codes of different oil products from Russia in order not to pay to the Russian budget, but to keep money for themselves.
They know how to arrange the schemes and they are open to doing it basically anywhere, but of course, they normally start with the neighbours, I would say, who speak a common language, like the Russian language, for example. In the first row, there are countries of the former Soviet Union and the companies from those countries, but with the global world and with global trade, you can imagine they may have some special companies—
I too want to thank the witnesses, Ms. Braw and Mr. Astapenka, for being with us today. I hope they can hear the English interpretation properly. My questions will be in French, of course.
Ms. Braw, you've explained in the past that, in order to seize assets, rather than freeze them, a link to crime must have been established. You suggested that seizing Russian assets without evidence of criminality would have the effect, as clarified earlier, of depriving western companies and individuals abroad of the legal protection that western governments have painstakingly pushed other governments to adopt in recent years.
The question is how to structure asset seizure and confiscation authorities in a way that can address these concerns.
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That is a central question of how we can help rebuild Ukraine and establish some sort of functioning order at the same time.
With regard to Russian state and private assets that have been frozen by the west, freezing assets is easy. It's part of the sanctions program. Assets being frozen doesn't have to imply criminality, whereas seizing assets can only be done when the authorities have established reasonable evidence of criminality. That is the challenge.
If we, western countries that are now in the position of freezing Russian assets, say that we have the assets, that we'll just seize them and use them for the reconstruction of Ukraine, that puts our companies operating globally in immense peril. Then other countries can say, “Well, if you don't respect the rule of law, then we won't respect the rule of law. If you do something that we don't like, we'll freeze your companies' assets and immediately seize them, and there will be nothing you can do.” The globalized economy is built on the rule of law. Even though other countries don't particularly excel in their adherence to the rule of law, we have to do so. It is the one big advantage that we have, and it's one of the big advantages that make our countries attractive for businesses to operate in.
Because so much Russian behaviour—when it comes to finances, business operations and so forth—involves criminal aspects, there is an opportunity there for western authorities to investigate many more Russian activities so that they can then seize the relevant frozen Russian assets. The Italian Guardia di Finanza is doing great work in that area. I think it's something that holds potential for other countries, as well.
We won't be able to seize enormous amounts of Russian assets by conducting criminal investigations, but we will be able to seize more than we have seized so far, while still adhering to the rule of law.
:
One reason the Russian government hasn't considered our western sanctions to be a particularly costly measure against it is that they were predictable. The Russian side could pretty easily figure out what the west would sanction once Russia invaded, and even before Russia invaded.
I think one of the key elements of effective deterrence is the element of surprise. Thomas Schelling won the Nobel Prize in economics for his work on deterrence theory. I'm not pretending to be the first to discuss the element of surprise, but that is a key part.
In the west, we like to do things in an orderly fashion, and obviously when many countries have to agree on something, you can't be particularly impulsive or innovative, but if the side to be sanctioned has no idea and cannot predict what it is that we'll sanction or indeed whom we will sanction, then that fear itself serves as a deterrent. That involves not just economic sanctions, but individual sanctions.
It should involve individual sanctions not just against the decision-makers themselves, but against their families. That's an area where we in the west have been reluctant to go because we don't want to punish children for the sins of their fathers, but I think we do have to think along those lines, not just when the war we were trying to prevent is already well under way, but as a deterrent.
What would have happened, for example, if in the lead-up to the war, when we were trying to prevent Russia from invading, we had sanctioned Putin's mistress and her two children straightaway? What if we had sanctioned the children of various leading Russian officials who live in the U.K., in Canada, or in the United States and have a good life there? Yes, it's not their fault that Russia was planning to invade Ukraine, but they are enjoying the benefit of our hospitality. I think all of us who are parents, and indeed everyone, know that a parent's love for their children is stronger than their love for themselves. If Russia or other decision-makers have to worry that if they do something of which the west disapproves their children might lose their right to live and work and enjoy life in the west, I think that would be a powerful way of using sanctions.
Not all the children—
:
Thank you so much for your words and for your question.
I'll try to be brief. We have different strategies, and, as I have already stated, the sanctions already applied have not changed the course of Lukashenko. Now it looks like he is going to stay there as long as he can, because it is important for him not to leave somewhere.
Politically, I would answer your question very briefly. Since Lukashenko has no legitimacy, there should be someone who should have the legitimacy to represent the people of Belarus. We believe that, for the moment, it's Tsikhanouskaya, who stood for the elections, who basically won the elections as we believe, and who created the United Transitional Cabinet.
It's a big challenge and a question for the international community how to deal with this cabinet, how to recognize it and how to acknowledge its existence. We are really open to any co-operation that we may have with different countries. If Canada would be the leading country in this respect, we would be very happy to co-operate.
It's not a sanctions policy; it was a strike, but I really appreciate the ability to speak on this subject.
We believe that Lukashenko turned the country into a concentration camp. In one of the reports of the human rights organizations, it was called “an open-air prison”. It's really rather difficult for the people living inside Belarus now to manifest something different or something that Lukashenko doesn't like. On top of that, Putin came to Belarus with the troops, the tanks, the rockets and the aircraft and launched the war of aggression against Ukraine. We believe that under these circumstances, Belarus could and maybe should be considered an occupied territory, when the people cannot really decide their destiny.
Of course, I should mention—I should have mentioned this earlier—the recent development of deployment of tactical nuclear weapons, which Lukashenko claims is done by his initiative, but it is done by Putin. They promised that the nuclear weapons would be delivered on July 8. That will be a very dangerous factor for regional security, at least, and of course, it undermines the non-proliferation treaty and all the obligations in this sphere.
We believe that such a development could be the cause of a real, strong response from the collective west, and that, maybe, specially designed sanctions should be planned if such a development occurs.
Ms. Braw, we keep cutting you off, so I feel like we need to let you finish some of your answers.
If you could also add to that, one of the things you said the last time I was asking you questions was that the unpredictable nature of sanctions makes them more effective. Of course, as an opposition member, my job is to make sure that I'm holding the government to account, so we want to understand why the government is imposing sanctions.
There has to be both the unpredictability to make them effective, but also some transparency, perhaps after the fact, so that we understand why those decisions are made. How do we balance that?
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That's not up to us; we're in the hands of the press gallery.
Now we go back to the second hour of our study on the sanctions regime.
My apologies to our two witnesses, who are joining us via Zoom. We're very grateful to have with us Professor Michael Nesbitt from the University of Calgary, as well as Ms. Amanda Strayer, who is a supervising staff attorney with Human Rights First.
Thank you very much for joining us today. You will each be provided five minutes for your opening remarks, after which we will open it up to questions from the members.
Please keep your eyes on the screen. Once you're very close to the time limit with respect to your opening remarks or with respect to the questions that are asked of you from the various members, I will hold up a card, and that means you should be wrapping it up within 10 seconds. Please do pay attention to the monitor.
That having been said, Mr. Nesbitt, you will go first. You have five minutes for your opening remarks. The floor is now yours. Thank you.
Thank you to everyone here. It's such a pleasure to be here. It's always an honour to be before a standing committee of the House of Commons.
Thank you also to those working behind the scenes to make this happen. I know there's a lot of hard work going on with Zoom and making all these meetings happen. It's greatly appreciated from everyone's end, I'm sure.
I'll start by saying that I'm an academic in the field of criminal and national security law, where I also study autonomous sanctions, but I have had an opportunity to work in the field as a former diplomat for Global Affairs Canada on the legal side and have worked on sanctions on both Iran and Syria. Given my background, the bulk of my commentary today is really going to focus on the relevant sanctions regimes from a practical, legal and, particularly, criminal law enforcement perspective.
With that, let me tell you briefly the story of autonomous sanctions enforcement in Canada. In Canada, good and responsible large private actors like big financial institutions are primarily, indeed almost exclusively, responsible for our autonomous sanctions enforcement, the corollary being that there is little transparency as to how this is taking place. On the government side, enforcement and punishment are almost entirely absent.
How do I know that? How do we know that? We know publicly that we have never charged an individual under the Magnitsky act with a sanctions violation. In now over 30 years since SEMA, the Special Economic Measures Act, was first introduced, by my count we have charged one individual and one company for violations. The charge against the individual fell apart almost before it began. The charge against the company resulted in a plea agreement, which I would suggest exhibited some misunderstanding of the regime as a whole almost across the board.
Under the United Nations Act, the regulations pertaining to Libya and Mr. Gaddafi are now making headlines in The Globe and Mail, of course. We likewise have, by my count, a single prosecution in decades and decades of various country-specific regimes.
Keep in mind that we have had tens of thousands of sanctions on the books under SEMA, the Magnitsky act and the various UN Act regimes. There are hundreds of millions or more in frozen assets. There is criticism from U.S. agencies about a lack of enforcement, and similar criticism from respected international organizations speaking to Canada's failures to stem the tide of money-laundering and sanctions-busting activity.
I'll add to that that every once in a while, what feels to me like every six months or so, we see a Canadian arrested in the U.S. for sanctions evasions, the details of which often appear to indicate that Canada, too, might have enforced it under our laws had we been doing so. Right now, the U.S. seems to be doing more enforcement of sanctions-busting activities happening in our jurisdiction than we are.
This failure to enforce is a rule of law failing. It sends a message to would-be sanctions busters that we are open for business at little expense, and it sends a message to allies like the U.S. that we are not a serious partner on the file.
As a starting point, I'll give you three really practical recommendations for how to begin to remedy our enforcement problem.
First, we need a comprehensive review of the legislative regime pertaining to autonomous sanctions, with domestic law and domestic enforcement as the focus. In the past, this file has been led by Global Affairs with a view to international law. I do not deny an albeit small role for international law to play nowadays, particularly with respect to enforcement, but this is primarily a domestic Canadian law enforcement problem, a domestic criminal or civil law problem, I would suggest, and it should and will play out in domestic courts applying domestic law.
As but one example of a possible legal change we could see here, to my mind, there is no legal reason, domestic or international, that would prevent us from changing SEMA and the Magnitsky act, and perhaps the UN Act, to provide for the power to list known transshippers and the like. To be really clear, we are already able to capture transshippers in our regime, so this would not be a change in terms of enforcement. It would be a change just in terms of whom we're listing. If we do not have the courage to go after known transshippers for targeted countries, that is and must be a political decision but one that should be made consciously.
Second, we need a civil law enforcement sanctions regime with significantly higher fines available to coincide with the freezing and seizing provisions we've seen recently. Under a strict criminal regime, as exists, we will run into what we call in the national security space the “intelligence to evidence dilemma”, if we have not already done so, and I suggest that it is a possible and probable reason for the collapse of our last sanctions case.
Criminal enforcement against companies, as we saw from our one enforcement action against a company in the history of any of these files, is already dealt with through fines, but small ones. A civil regime would allow for greater fines, which would have more of a deterrent effect and provide benefits associated with avoiding some of the troublesome aspects of our criminal disclosure regime and the elevated standard of proof in criminal trials.
Third and finally, I think we need to think differently about how the autonomous sanctions regime file is managed within government. Right now, our reviews of autonomous sanctions seem limited by assuming that GAC, Global Affairs, should continue to be the sole lead on the file and the money should, in general, follow. It is time to question that assumption. CBSA needs money and the opportunity to renovate its work on sanctions. The same is true of the RCMP. CSIS and FINTRAC need heavier involvement and information-sharing powers. The same may be true of CSE and the Treasury Board.
Similarly, it's often overlooked that the Public Prosecution Service of Canada will ultimately prosecute these offences, and yet, bluntly speaking, they have no internal expertise. We have seen no monetary or human resource commitments—
:
Mr. Chair and honourable members of the committee, thank you for the opportunity to testify today on Magnitsky sanctions.
Human Rights First is an independent, non-profit advocacy organization dedicated to promoting and protecting human rights and urging the U.S. to take a leading role in this effort, both at home and around the world.
For the past six years, Human Rights First has built a global coalition of 300 civil society groups to advocate for the use of targeted human rights and anti-corruption sanctions, both in the U.S. and in other jurisdictions with Magnitsky-style sanctions programs. We're proud to have the Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights, which testified last week before this body, leading the coalition's work in Canada, as well as partners in the U.K. and the EU.
From the first U.S. global Magnitsky sanctions in 2017, civil society has been integral to their effectiveness. By our estimate, one-third of all U.S. global Magnitsky sanctions have had a basis in recommendations from civil society.
Today, I'd like to highlight three ways civil society provides critical contributions to governments implementing targeted human rights and anti-corruption sanctions, which Human Rights First would encourage the Government of Canada to build on.
First, civil society groups are a key source of information that governments need to impose sanctions. Civil society has unparalleled evidence of abuses and insight into who bears responsibility based on years of research, monitoring, interviews with victims and on-site documentation. These are sources government officials often don't have.
We've worked with civil society groups to bring more than 160 well-documented files to the U.S. government, recommending specific perpetrators for Magnitsky sanctions. This pipeline is reflected in about one-third of U.S. global Magnitsky cases, including ones the U.S. government cites as among the most impactful sanctions. This speaks to the quality of evidence and analysis civil society provides and the fact that sanctions in the name of human rights and anti-corruption are more credible when they reflect the priorities of independent human rights and anti-corruption groups.
As more jurisdictions have adopted Magnitsky sanctions, we've encouraged other governments to take a similar approach to engaging civil society. As one example of how this can work, we helped coordinate the submission of detailed sanctions recommendations for the arbitrary detention of Russian opposition leader Vladimir Kara-Murza in multiple jurisdictions. We are pleased that Canada was the first to announce sanctions in Vladimir's case in November, followed by the U.S., the U.K. and the EU. These all followed submissions from civil society. We'd encourage the Canadian government to build on this positive engagement with civil society.
Second, civil society plays a vital role in understanding the impact of sanctions and their enforcement. In the wake of U.S. sanctions against Bangladesh's Rapid Action Battalion for human rights abuses in 2021, civil society groups tracked the abrupt halt in extrajudicial killings by the unit, as well as the eventual resumption of those abuses. They highlighted how the sanctions cut through government efforts to suppress speech and sparked unprecedented calls for accountability. They documented threats from law enforcement pressuring families of victims to recant reports of disappeared loved ones and increased surveillance and harassment of human rights groups. This information is critical for governments as they monitor sanctions enforcement, consider additional measures and address calls for the lifting of sanctions.
Finally, civil society groups identify gaps in the implementation of sanctions programs and urge governments towards more equitable use of these tools. In November, we released a joint report with our partners, “Multilateral Magnitsky Sanctions at Five Years”, analyzing how the U.S., Canada, the U.K. and the EU have used their Magnitsky sanctions. We found key gaps across the four jurisdictions. These included significant shortcomings in how Canada uses sanctions for human rights abuses and corruption under the JVCFOA and SEMA, such as missing opportunities to multilateralize and strengthen the impact of the sanctions, rarely imposing sanctions for corruption, excluding close partners and allies from sanctions even when merited, and failing to provide accountability for marginalized victims of human rights abuses.
On this last point, we found that in five years Canada had never imposed Magnitsky sanctions for human rights abuses against LGBTQ+ or indigenous persons. In its public announcements, only 7% of its Magnitsky cases mentioned female victims and just 1% mentioned children. If these sanctions are tools for accountability, we found they're overlooking most of the world's victims.
Canadian officials have thoughtfully engaged with these findings and we understand Global Affairs plans to take them into account in the future. We're eager to build on this engagement, to share the perspectives of those fighting human rights abuses and corruption in their countries and around the world and to strengthen the use of Magnitsky sanctions to hold perpetrators accountable.
On behalf of Human Rights First, thank you and I look forward to your questions today.
It is now my turn to thank the witnesses for being with us today.
Mr. Nesbitt, I'm going to continue with you on the same subject. In the hour prior to your arrival at the committee, we were discussing the effectiveness of sanctions, particularly with regard to the relationship between Russia and Belarus. The witness who spoke to us about this was referring to the lack of coordination which in some cases renders sanctions all but ineffective.
Listening to your testimony and the questions from my colleagues, I also remember the answers of some officials who came before the committee to testify on the application and implementation of the various sanctions. There seemed to be a vagueness as to who was doing what in all this.
This leads me to ask myself a question, which I'm going to ask you too, because I imagine you may have an answer: If Canada's sanctions are poorly applied abroad, where they should be applied, and they're poorly managed or poorly understood in Canada, don't our efforts amount to a shot in the dark, as we say?
:
It's an area that we're studying a lot at the moment in terms of how to best evaluate the impact of sanctions. Obviously it's a very case-specific evaluation and can be a little bit difficult to overgeneralize.
We find that governments use sanctions for a variety of different reasons, as you mentioned. Sometimes it's to try to deter the behaviour of actors overseas. Sometimes it's to signal or to send strong messages of solidarity with victims or to build international consensus around a particular condemnation for a particular set of abuses or efforts to try to disrupt corrupt networks, for example.
I think one area in terms of impact that we're seeing would be really beneficial for governments to continue to focus on is improving the multilateralization of their sanctions under the Magnitsky regimes that they have. Right now, there's not a lot of overlap between the U.S., Canada, the U.K. and the EU in how they're using these sanctions. That creates gaps for perpetrators of these abuses that they then get to exploit.
For example, I mentioned earlier in my testimony Bangladesh's Rapid Action Battalion, which was sanctioned by the U.S. in 2021. Those sanctions were not replicated by Canada, the U.K or the EU. We later found information that members from that unit had travelled to the U.K. and to the EU to obtain training and different types of services that they would then use in law enforcement back in Bangladesh and, presumably, to further their role in repression in Bangladesh. That's an area where, if the U.S.'s partners—Canada, the U.K and the EU—had taken action to step up and sanction members of the Rapid Action Battalion in the same way the U.S. had, they would not have been able to travel to the U.K, the EU or even Canada to continue to obtain the kinds of services and support they needed to be a more effective repressive unit back in Bangladesh.
:
Oh boy, where to start?
There is the office of foreign assets control within Treasury, which really has the expertise on the business side, the following-the-money side, the following-corporate-structure side, to assist the State Department and others in coming up with those lists and to ensure that when we come up with those lists there is due process backing up our justification for the individuals on those lists so they can be enforced. That's the purpose of those. At least it has been my experience that they have individuals with real background in this sort of stuff—accounting, business acumen and so on.
One of the problems for Global Affairs—and it's one of these problems that just need close attention and human resourcing—is that you're talking about diplomats, largely, who haven't necessarily been trained for it. I'm sure Global Affairs is trying to work on some training. We're also talking about an organization that people move in and out of every couple of years. Ideally, you're going to go away on a posting somewhere. It's going to be harder to maintain and build that sort of expertise than it would be in a permanent organization, such as OFAC. We just don't really have that equivalent in Canada to provide the links between those at the RCMP—who will want to know about the corporate structure, the money and how it's happening for their enforcement—and those at Global Affairs, who will know about the names on the list, the foreign countries and that sort of stuff.
I think that's the best I can tell you in that regard.
:
Sure. Thank you very much.
Our work is with not only U.S.-based, but internationally based and locally based NGOs and civil society organizations whose sole purpose is documenting and tracking human rights abuses and corrupt networks in their countries. They're the ones being directly impacted by those abuses.
We've seen that for these types of global human rights and anti-corruption sanctions tools, in order for them to be the most effective and the most credible, using the recommendations of civil society is key. I think some of the panellists in the previous session highlighted this credibility issue with the sanctions.
I'll just note that in the study you referenced, which we did with the Raoul Wallenberg Centre, over the past five years we saw that with human rights and anti-corruption sanctions done under the JVCFOA and SEMA, there was an incredible lack of geographic diversity in those sanctions from the Canadian side. About 90% of Canada's sanctions were focused on just four countries: Russia, Belarus, Nicaragua, and Venezuela.
There are missed opportunities to be recognizing the human rights abuses and corruption that are impacting communities and countries all over the world, and for the ability of the Canadian government and partners to be doing more to stand up.