Thursday, February 11, 2021

Environmental law group to challenge Alberta oil inquiry in court


CALGARY — An environmental law charity is to ask a judge today to shut down Alberta's inquiry into the purported foreign funding of anti-oil campaigns.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

Ecojustice argues in its written submissions that the inquiry was formed for an improper purpose, which the law charity says was to intimidate those concerned about the environmental effects of oil and gas development.

The group also contends there's a reasonable apprehension of bias and that the inquiry is dealing with matters outside of Alberta's jurisdiction — arguments the provincial government disputes in its submissions.

Lawyers for the provincial government say cabinet is entitled — and mandated — to decide what's in the public interest and what issues warrant a public inquiry.

The inquiry was one plank of the so-called fight-back strategy the United Conservatives touted during the 2019 election campaign.

The deadline for the inquiry headed by forensic accountant Steve Allan has been delayed three times and its budget has been increased by $1 million to $3.5 million.

The hearing before Court of Queen's Bench Justice Karen Horner has been scheduled for two days. Its initial April 2020 court date was pushed back due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 11, 2020.

The Canadian Press



ALBERTA SAFE INJECTION SITE
Suspension of iOAT could lead to patients dying, lawyer argues during injunction hearing

UCP LAWNORDER SACRIFICES LIVES
TO EVANGELICAL IDEOLOGY

Patients who suffer from severe opioid use disorder could face irreparable harms including risk of death or sexual assault if a government-funded treatment program is halted next month, an Alberta court heard Wednesday.
© Provided by Calgary Herald Civil rights lawyer Avnish Nanda.

Clinics in Calgary and Edmonton, which provide injectable opioid agonist treatment (iOAT), are slated to close in March following a decision by the United Conservative government, pending the outcome of a court challenge.


Shuttering those clinics would lead to “adverse health effects” for iOAT patients, who are likely to return to using street opioids, experience homelessness, contract sexually transmitted infections or lose access to primary care, argued Edmonton lawyer Avnish Nanda during Wednesday’s injunction hearing.

He said at least one iOAT patient, who is not a plaintiff in the lawsuit, has died since the UCP government announced last year it would not renew a grant dedicated to Alberta’s iOAT program .

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The program has been described as a “last resort” for people with severe opioid addiction who have been unsuccessful with other forms of treatment such as methadone or suboxone.

Eleven iOAT patients with chronic opioid use disorder launched a legal challenge against the provincial government in September, alleging the decision to halt iOAT services violates their constitutional rights.

Justice Grant Dunlop reserved his decision Wednesday. His ruling is expected by the end of February, which will determine whether iOAT patients can continue receiving treatment until the lawsuit reaches a conclusion, even if the matter is still before the courts beyond March.

Nanda argued the pilot program, which launched in 2018 under the former NDP government, never explicitly stated an end date. He said they introduced iOAT with the intention of making it a permanent frontline treatment option.

The government’s counsel argued any perceived harm is speculative and the program was never guaranteed for an indefinite amount of time.

“iOAT is not just about treating someone’s severe opioid use disorder. It’s about addressing the broader health needs. It’s about finding a way to engage this patient in the health-care system,” Nanda told the court.

“If you remove any component to that, whether it’s wraparound services or injectable medication, it ceases to be iOAT.”

Nanda said the scope of an alternative program proposed by the government remains unknown.

He cited a cross-examination of Mark Snaterse, executive director of addiction and mental health for Alberta Health Services, who compared iOAT to the “Cadillac model” of service and said alternatives would likely be of lesser quality.

“My concern here today is that, what if we get a vehicle that just has an engine but not the transmission? What if it has no doors?” Nanda said. “What if it has certain components, parts, of what iOAT is and Alberta claims it’s iOAT, but really it’s not?”

Nate Gartke, a lawyer representing the government, acknowledged “there will be some changes” in how the service is offered.

“The current model of iOAT clinics is … a Cadillac service. It’s the gold standard. It’s attempting to provide as many treatments as possible in one location,” Gartke told the court.

“Just because a Cadillac service is not being provided, (Snaterse) still does say that it will be ‘a very good car.’ We’re not going to be providing them a car that doesn’t have a transmission or windows. We’re going to be providing them with a fully functioning service.”

Lillian Riczu, co-counsel to Gartke, said the plaintiffs have a “weak and frivolous case.”

“There will be minimal variation in the delivery method, however the variation in the delivery does not result in any harm, let alone irreparable harm to the applicants,” said Riczu, adding the same suite of ancillary services will be available through the Opioid Dependency Program in Alberta.

“Alberta’s evidence demonstrates that iOAT was a pilot study, it’s a controversial treatment and is only offered at a handful of jurisdictions around the world and in a limited number of Canadian cities.”

Nanda posed concerns about the government’s alternative treatment option, including whether there would be sufficient staffing, access to the same wraparound supports and trust in service providers.

There is no grant in place yet for the alternative service.
Related
'A matter of life and death': U of C study details benefits of threatened opioid treatment program
'It is a death sentence': Patients launch lawsuit after UCP cuts funding for opioid treatment program
Open letter calls on province to reverse decision ending a 'life-saving' opioid dependency program
Patient says iOAT provided ‘hope for a better life’

One plaintiff testified the closure of iOAT is a “death sentence” for her.

She said program staff had become “the only real family” she’s ever known. Through iOAT, she stopped using street opioids, found housing and left sex work, which previously helped support her substance use.

The program gave her “hope for a better life,” she testified in an affidavit.

But its anticipated end forced her back to her previous lifestyle.

“I returned to street opioid use because I felt like the system had abandoned me again and I knew that without iOAT I had no other option to manage my opioid use disorder.”

She also returned to sex work.

In December, she testified three men violently raped her and “dumped her in the snow.” She later tested positive for HIV at the iOAT clinic, which she believes is a result of the rape.

“I am so upset and angry with the government. It should be ashamed for what it is doing and the lives that are being ruined with the closure of iOAT,” she testified.

“The government gave us hope with iOAT, had us trust them, and now that has all been taken away, forcing us back into the streets with the violence and dangers we managed to avoid.”

She said the only reason she sought help after the December incident was because she trusts staff at iOAT and additional services were accessible at the Calgary clinic, such as the sexual transmitted infection screening.

Nanda said iOAT patients share similar stories to one another, including trauma endured prior to using opioids. He said many have a distrust of the health-care system due to prior circumstances.

“We’re really talking about the most vulnerable and marginalized group of opioid use disorder patients in Alberta,” he told the court. “It’s that only through iOAT they have aspirations, they have goals beyond the next time they use opioids. They’re talking about ambitions and plans and goals that they never thought possible.”

Nanda called the program a “one-stop shop” for medical care for patients.

“It’s the only effective treatment available and recognized for folks with severe opioid use disorder,” he said.

The injunction hearing followed the release of a University of Calgary study this week which detailed the benefits of iOAT, according to 23 patient interviews.

Clients said the service “transformed” their lives, citing improved mental health, decreased reliance on street drugs, fewer withdrawal symptoms and an overall improvement to their quality of life.

Researcher Jennifer Jackson also highlighted other studies of similar programs in the Netherlands and B.C., which showed between 13 and 20 per cent of patients die when services are scrapped.

The province is already seeing record-high opioid-related deaths. A staggering 904 fatalities were recorded between January and October — marking the deadliest year on record with two months of data still undisclosed.

“The only reasonable, factual conclusion is that, at best, there is uncertainly about whether this is iOAT or it’s not iOAT,” Nanda told the court.

“If that is the case, then the harms that I’ve described about relapse back to street opioid use all manifests.”

Myanmar protesters march for sixth consecutive day

The military junta continues to arrest senior government figures, despite ongoing protests. Protesters say they will continue until the junta ends.


Protesters carry signs reading "free our leaders" as they gather in Myanmar's economic capital Yangon



Protesters gathered across Myanmar on Thursday for the sixth straight day of anti-coup demonstrations.

In capital Naypyitaw, hundreds of people came to support the civil disobedience movement. They carried placards supporting ousted leader Aung San Suu Kyi and chanted anti-junta slogans. Despite previous clashes, Thursday's early marches were peaceful.

Protesters also gathered in the cities of Dawei and Mandalay, as well as the commercial hub of Yangon, where they urged employees of Myanmar's central bank not to go to work.

"We aren't doing this for a week or a month — we are determined to do this until the end when [Suu Kyi] and President U Win Myint are released," one bank employee who had joined the protest told news agency Agence France-Presse.


Watch video 02:29Myanmar's youth drive opposition to military coup

Junta arrests more government aides

Pro-junta forces arrested the deputy speaker of the parliament's lower house and a key aide to Suu Kyi, Kyaw Tint Swe, according to monitor Assistance Association for Political Prisoners. More than 200 people have been arrested since the coup, the group said.

Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) party, said five people linked to the toppled government were grabbed from their homes overnight, and that the top leadership of the former electoral commission had all been arrested.

Watch video03:33 Myanmar military's response 'clearly escalating'

Why are people protesting?

Senior military figures seized power last week, claiming widespread voter fraud in November's elections, where the NLD won a landslide victory.

They arrested elected officials and quickly stacked political offices and the court system with loyalists.

The military originally seized power in 1962 and strictly governed the country until democratic elections in 2010. Under civilian rule, the country was embroiled in ethnic tensions and rights abuses, however Suu Kyi and her party enjoyed widespread domestic popularity.

Since the coup, people have protested in the tens of thousands and established a civil disobedience campaign. This was met with military violence, with harsh crackdowns and widespread arrests.


AUNG SAN SUU KYI: FROM FREEDOM FIGHTER TO PARIAH
Darling of democracy
Aung San Suu Kyi, the daughter of Myanmar's assassinated founding father Aung San, returned to her home country in the late 1980s after studying and starting a family in England. She became a key figure in the 1988 uprisings against the country's military dictatorship. Her National League for Democracy (NLD) was victorious in 1990 elections, but the government refused to honor the vote   PHOTOS 123456789



More international sanctions


Western nations have condemned the coup and its subsequent crackdown, with the US announcing further sanctions on Wednesday.

"I again call on the Burmese military to immediately release democratic political leaders and activists," US President Joe Biden said, as he announced sanctions. "The military must relinquish power."

European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell also warned of possible sanctions.

United Nations Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar, Tom Andrews, warned that all military members engaged in human rights abuses risked prosecution.


aw/rs (AFP, Reuters, AP)

 REST IN POWER

 AND REMEMBER HELL IS THE PARTY PLACE

Larry Flynt, porn mogul and Hustler publisher, dies at 78

The self-styled free speech champion 

was best known for being the publisher of Hustler magazine. 

His family is yet to confirm the cause of his death.


      LARRY FLYNT WAS THE EIGHTIES

   

US porn mogul Larry Flynt, who was best known as the publisher for Hustler magazine, died at the age of 78 in Los Angeles, his publicist said, confirming earlier media reports. 

Celebrity news outlet TMZ, which broke the news, said Flynt died of heart failure. However, his family members are yet to confirm the cause of his death. 

Flynt was married five times and had five daughters and a son, as well as grandchildren. 

He described himself as a "smut peddler who cares" and was a self-styled free speech champion. 

Flynt published the first issue of Hustler in 1974, as a counterpart to Playboy magazine. He soon expanded his publishing business into other titles. He then expanded his business to include porn sites, clubs and a casino. His empire was estimated to be worth between $100 million to $500 million (€82.5 million to €412.7 million).

Self-styled free speech advocate

Flynt was a self-styled free speech advocate, involved in many controversies throughout his life. One of the most well-known ones was a 1988 case in which the US Supreme Court made a ruling protecting writers and artists mocking public personalities

The case, Hustler v Falwell, involved a parody ad about televangelist Jerry Falwell published in Hustler magazine.

In 1978, Flynt was shot by a white supremacist for publishing the photo of an interracial couple in Hustler. The shooting left him partially paralyzed, with permanent spinal cord damage. 

tg/sms (AFP, Reuters)

Tokyo Olympics head Yoshiro Mori to resign over sexist remarks — reports

The former prime minister and current president of the summer games' organizing committee is due to step down after saying that women speak too much in meetings. The remarks sparked outrage at home and abroad.



Yoshiro Mori, head of the Toyko 2020 Olympic organizing committee, has been facing growing calls to step down

Yoshiro Mori, president of the Tokyo Olympics organizing committee, is set to resign after facing backlash for sexist comments, Japanese media reported Thursday.

The controversial comments by the 83-year old former prime minister at a Japanese Olympic Committee board meeting in the first week of February ignited a firestorm.

"If we increase the number of female board members, we have to make sure their speaking time is restricted somewhat, they have difficulty finishing, which is annoying," Mori said.

"We have about seven women at the organizing committee but everyone understands their place," he added.

At a hastily called news conference on February 4, Mori attempted to retract his remarks. Admitting they were "inappropriate" and against the Olympic spirit, he declined at that point to resign.

Female opposition lawmakers protested against Mori's sexist remarks


With opposition lawmakers demanding his resignation, the Fuji News Network and public broadcaster NHK reported that he has told officials of his wish to step down.

The Mainichi daily newspaper reported he intends to announce his resignation at a meeting on Friday.
History of blunders

Mori's brief tenure as prime minister between 2000 to 2001 was marked by a string of gaffes and blunders. This included continuing to play golf even after learning that a Japanese fishing boat had been struck and sunk by a US submarine, killing nine.

While in office, his ratings began sliding within weeks. A year later they were in the single digits.

Mori remained a lawmaker until 2012, working on Japan-Russia relations as well as sports-related advocacy.

This included helping Japan's bid for the 2019 Rugby World Cup and the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.

Watch video03:15 Japan: Uncertainty dampens enthusiasm for Summer Games

Mori, who has battled lung cancer for years, previously said his last public service to his country would be leading the now delayed Tokyo Summer Games to a successful conclusion.

When pressed recently on whether he really thought women talked too much, he said: "I don't listen to women that much lately, so I don't know."

Another hurdle for the Summer Games

The Tokyo Summer Games have been struggling to overcome a number of obstacles, including ballooning costs and a plagiarism scandal involving the official logo, before being postponed by the coronavirus pandemic.

Recent polling indicates that nearly 80% of the Japanese public are opposed to holding the Summer Games as scheduled this year due to concerns about the coronavirus.


mb/rs (Reuters, AFP)
Two Chechen gay men in 'mortal danger' after being arrested in Russia, alleged in supporting terrorism

Two gay men from Chechnya face “mortal danger” after being abducted from Russia and forcibly returned to Chechnya under terrorism investigation, a Russian LGBT rights group has stated.

© Provided by National Post Banner with Putin wearing makeup appeared on a protest against the LGBTQ prosecution in Chechnya near the Russian embassy in 2017.

According to the Russian LGBT Network, Salekh Magamadov, 20, and Ismail Isayev, 17, resided in Nizhny Novgorod, east of Moscow, when they were kidnapped last Thursday by both Chechen and Russian police. The two men are confined for allegations of supporting terrorism,” the Network told The Guardian . They were sent to a police station in Chechen town Gudermes this Saturday.

Magamadov and Isayev fled Chechnya last year in June through the LGBT group after they were arrested and tortured in Chechnya by special police in April 2020 for operating an opposition channel on the Telegram app, called Osal Nakh 95.

Based on Russian media, they were detained on suspicion of posting offensive publications, comments and photographs of other people, for which they were alleged in terrorism. But Tim Bestsvet, the Russian LGBT Network spokesperson, said they were arrested “initially because of their sexual orientation,” the Moscow Times reported.

Both Magamadov and Isayev were forced to record a video apologizing for running the Osal Nakh 95 channel.

Bestsvet told the Guardian that he is worried for the safety of the two men, referring to other incidents when men had been returned to Chechnya, where they vanished or died.

“There have been cases when relatives brought back to Chechnya people that we had evacuated and then these people would die or, we can say, were probably murdered,” Bestsvet told the Moscow Times.



According to the LGBT Network, law enforcement officers detained Magamadov and Isayev in their apartment in Nizhny Novgorod on Feb. 4. The LGBT group later received a frightening phone call from the two men with screaming in the background.

After their lawyer Alexander Nemov arrived at the apartment 30 minutes later, he found the evidence of a struggle and noticed that both Magamadov and Isayev had disappeared.

The LGBT Network reported that the neighbours saw people in black uniforms entering the building a few hours before the incident happened. They claim those people could have been the Russian SWAT-team.

Regional Police Precinct could not affirm the two arrested were in their custody.

Euronews stated that Nemov has visited Chechnya to speak with his clients but was not allowed to see them. The LGBT Network reoirted that the police failed to explain why the men were arrested and did not provide any information to the lawyer for at least two days.

On Sunday, the LGBT Network posted on their Instagram that Magamadov and Isayev were forced to reject the lawyer’s assistance, making the LGBT group send them a new one.

Although Magamadov is more than 18-years-old, Isayev, who is 17-years-old, is a minor and can deny legal representation through his parents, the Moscow Times said.

Bestsvet said Isayev’s father went to the Chechen police station on Saturday and was pressured to prevent his son from seeing the lawyer.

Akhmed Dudayev, an aide of the Chechnya’s leader Ramzan Kadyrov, told the Guardian that the men had admitted they helped an illegal armed group headed by Aslan Byutukayev , who was named as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist by the U.S. in 2016. If convicted of terrorism, the men could face up to 15 years of jail time in Chechnya.

Dudyaev also claimed the arrest was legal and that any effort to sway the case would be “senseless and futile,” The Guardian reported.

Russian republic Chechnya has been condemned for alleged oppression of the LGBT community since 2017, and many gay people claimed they were tortured by law enforcement.

In a response to the alleged persecution of gay people in Chechnya, the Russian LGBT Network based in Saint Petersburg has aided 200 people to leave the republic either to foreign countries or to other areas in Russia.

The Guardian stated the Chechnya officials rejected reports of such allegations, although several men had reported police brutality and abductions.

Kadyrov was also alleged in other human rights violations, claiming “there are no gay men in Chechnya.”

NOT CAPITALI$M BUT SELF EMPLOYMENT
Cuba opens door to more capitalism, after a long wait

Cuba took a long-awaited and likely irreversible step towards massively expanding the island's private sector over the weekend
.
© Yamil Lage/AFP/Getty Images Cuban farmers in Vinales,
 Pinar del Rio province, Cuba, on January 10, 2021.

On Saturday, Cuba's communist-run government announced that Cubans will soon be able to seek employment or start businesses in most fields of work.

Previously, Cubans were restricted to working in just 127 officially approved private sector job descriptions. Some of those legalized activities over the years included working as a barber, tire repairer, palm tree trimmer or "dandy," as the government referred to Cubans who dressed up to pose with tourists for photos.

But many Cubans chafed that the government's list did not include opportunities created by recently increased access to the internet and Cubans' own seemingly limitless ability to innovate and invent.

Now they will have the ability to work in over 2,000 different fields.

"The new measures for self-employment approved by the Council of Ministers will expand significantly the activities one can carry out. A new and important step to develop this kind of work," tweeted Cuban official Marino Murrillo Jorge, "the reforms czar," who has been overseeing its glacially-paced attempt to modernize the local economy.

Self-employment and capitalism were all but forbidden in Cuba until its near-total economic collapse, brought about by the fall of Soviet Union, then the island's largest trading party.

Gradually, and with regular backtracking, the Cuban government allowed Cubans to stop working low-paid state jobs and go into business for themselves. By the government's own statistics, more than 600,000 Cubans now work in the private sector, although the number is likely far higher when accounting for the island's thriving black market.

Still, Cuban government officials often have treated the island's entrepreneurs as a necessary evil and a possible Trojan Horse that could allow opponents in the United States to at long last bring down the revolution.

And while the official line from Cuban officials is that they have been implementing free market reforms "without hurry but without stopping," the opening had stalled out as the government seemed to doubt the wisdom of further empowering Cuban entrepreneurs.

But with the widespread impacts of the pandemic and as Raul Castro, 89, is expected to step down in April as head of the Cuban communist party, the organization that charts the island's long-term economic planning, Cuba in 2021 has finally embarked on two major reforms: Unifying its labyrinthine dual-currency system and now lifting restrictions on jobs.

The government will still prohibit or restrict Cubans from privately undertaking 124 activities. While those activities have yet to be disclosed, they will likely continue the state's monopoly on health care, telecommunications and mass media.

The new measure, over time, will likely alter the face of the island's economy, said Cuban economist Ricardo Torres.

"We don't know yet which 124 activities will remain prohibited but it's safe to assume that the possibilities will be expanded for professionals," Torres told CNN. "An old demand in a country that has made an enormous investment in education. "

The changes come too as Cuba seeks to improve relations with the US after four years of a barrage of new economic sanctions from the Trump administration.

"This is long overdue, it's welcome news, and the United States should affirm that the embargo was never intended, and will not be used, to penalize private enterprise in Cuba," Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) posted on his Twitter account.

"After more than half a century isn't it time to repeal a Cold War embargo that has failed to achieve any of its objectives, and has only made life harder for the struggling Cuban people?"

Earlier this month, Leahy, a long-time advocate for improved relations with Cuba, co-sponsored a long-shot bill to lift the nearly six-decade-old US economic embargo on the island.

Cuba's endlessly inventive and long suffering entrepreneurs will be watching to see what happens.

© Yamil Lage/AFP/Getty Images People queue to buy food in Havana, on February 2, 2021, as COVID-19 cases surge in the island nation. - Cases in Cuba, one of least-affected nations in the region by the coronavirus pandemic, have been surging in recent days. (Photo by Yamil LAGE / AFP) (Photo by YAMIL LAGE/AFP via Getty Images)

Swedes acquitted of desecrating sunken ferry with robot dive

STOCKHOLM — Two Swedish nationals were acquitted Monday of desecrating a sunken ferry by sending down a robot in the Baltic Sea to film the wreck of one of Europe’s deadliest maritime disasters.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

In its ruling, the Goteborg District Court said that the men had “committed acts that are punishable under the so-called Estonia Act” by sending down a cable-bound diving robot to the M/S Estonia, which sank Sept. 28, 1994, killing 852 people.

“However, the district court considers that the men, who are both Swedish citizens, cannot be punished because they have committed the act from a German-flagged ship in international waters.”

The September 2019 dive was banned by the law protecting the car ferry that lies in international waters with most of the victims still entombed inside. The legislation has been signed by Sweden, Estonia and Finland but not by Germany.

The ferry is on the seabed some 80 metres (264 feet) below the surface. The wreck is considered a graveyard, which gives the area protection under the law.

The Swedes — Henrik Evertsson and Linus Andersson — were part of a film team that worked on a documentary about the sinking of the Estonia. The team included Swedish, Norwegian and German citizens, while the boat’s crew included German and Polish citizens.

The court said “Germany is not bound by the agreement reached between Estonia, Finland and Sweden on which the law is based. The act is therefore not punishable on the German-flagged ship, which is to be seen as German territory.”

During the dive, a large hole in the hull of the ferry was spotted, raising questions about the cause of the sinking and prompting Swedish, Finnish and Estonian authorities to say that a new dive is needed.


A 1997 report had concluded that the ferry that was sailing from Tallinn to Stockholm sank after the bow door locks failed in a storm, and flatly rejected the theory of a hole, which has long been the focus of speculation about a possible explosion on board.

No timeline for a new dive has been announced.

The Associated Press
SAUDI SPY CHIEF IN CANADIAN EXILE
Saudi 'Tiger Squad' assassins hunt for targets no matter their country of residence, explosive new court filings claim

The dissident spymaster who fled the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and has been hiding out in Canada has filed new court documents in a suit against Mohammed bin Salman, alleging a pressure campaign by the Saudi Crown prince included attempts to coerce his daughter to visit the Saudi consulate in Istanbul — the location where, days later, Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi was murdered.
© Aljabri family Saad Aljabri.

Saad Aljabri, formerly a top adviser to Mohammed bin Nayef, the nephew of King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, fled to Canada in September 2017 following a palace coup that saw bin Nayef replaced by Mohammed bin Salman as the heir to the Saudi throne.


Aljabri has been living quietly in Toronto ever since. Many of his family have also fled Saudi Arabia, though two of his children, Omar and Sarah, were banned from leaving the country in the summer of 2017, and vanished in March 2020. They have not been heard from since.

Since fleeing, Aljabri claims he’s feared for his life. In August 2020, he filed a suit in U.S. courts against the Crown Prince and multiple other defendants, alleging a conspiracy to kill him, kidnap and torture his family, or return Aljabri to the Kingdom to be silenced.





Saudi Arabia has maintained Aljabri in fact embezzled $4.5 billion from a state counter-terrorism fund. In late January 2021 a lawsuit was filed in Ontario Superior Court against Aljabri, members of his family and other associates for fraud and misappropriation of funds. Saad Aljabri and his family have long denied this, though defence documents have yet to be filed in court.
Spymaster hiding in Canada alleged to have stolen $4.5B from Kingdom of Saudia Arabia in new lawsuit
Saudi 'Tiger Squad' assassins tried to enter Canada to kill dissident Saad Aljabri: U.S. lawsuit

None of the allegations have been proven in court. But, in court filings from December 2020, the Crown Prince sought to have the U.S. lawsuit dismissed, arguing Aljabri is an international fugitive and that an American court has no jurisdiction to adjudicate Saudi national interests.

“Those interests include Saudi Arabia’s criminal investigation and prosecution of a former high-level Saudi official and his co-conspirators for corruption, and Saudi Arabia’s efforts to locate that former official — now an international fugitive — and bring him to justice,” the filing argues.

The new details filed in Washington, D.C., court on Thursday, include the suggestion that a Khashoggi-style killing could have been attempted against Aljabri’s daughter, Hissah Almuzaini. The documents say operatives attempted to get to her to enter the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.

“Fortunately for Hissah, she never went to the consulate. After Jamal Khashoggi entered the very same consulate days later, Hissah learned the fate awaiting her if she had obeyed,” the lawsuit says.

Documents also detail the pressure campaign against Aljabri’s family in an attempt, he alleges, to get him to return to the Kingdom.
© Supplied Sarah Aljabri with her father, Saad Aljabri. Along with her brother Omar, Sarah has not been seen by her family since mid-March.

Hissah’s husband, Salem Almuzaini, was kidnapped in Dubai in September 2017, the lawsuit says, and tortured. “They brutally beat his feet with a metal bar hundreds of times, turning his feet black and blue, splitting open his skin, and creating a river of blood flowing down his legs,” the lawsuit claims.

Almuzaini was released in January 2018, the suit says, but again vanished in August 2020, around the time Aljabri filed his lawsuit in the U.S.

“In all, approximately twenty of Dr. Saad’s family, friends, and business associates have been kidnapped by Defendant bin Salman’s henchmen and held incommunicado in secret locations without any charges, in blatant violation of both Saudi and international law,” the lawsuit says.

The lawsuit also says that following the failure in October 2018 of the “Tiger Squad” assassins — 50 operatives with “a variety of experience and expertise relevant to locating and executing a target and covering up the murder” — to enter Canada and kill Aljabri, bin Salman held a meeting in May 2020 to concoct another plan to murder him.

That plan, the lawsuit claims, would involve assassins travelling to the United States and then crossing the border into Canada by land, instead of flying into the Macdonald–Cartier International Airport in Ottawa, as they’d attempted in October 2018.

“Undoubtedly, Defendant bin Salman changed his tactics in response to the Tiger Squad’s failed attempts to enter Canada in October 2018,” the lawsuit says. “As a result of Defendant bin Salman’s directive, the newest stage of a multi-year campaign of execution, Dr. Saad’s life remains in dire peril to this day.”

The documents also allege bin Salman’s Tiger Squad has been used to kidnap Saudis in Europe, including Prince Saud bin Saif Alnasr from France in 2015, and Prince Sultan bin Turki II, also from France, in 2016, as well as the abduction and torture of Sulaiman Aldoweesh, a dissident religious cleric, in Mecca.

“If the allegations … seem fantastical, that is only because it is difficult to fathom the depths of depravity of Defendant bin Salman and the men he empowered to carry out his will,” says the lawsuit.

These operations, the lawsuit claims, have been carried out in France (in the cases of bin Saif and bin Turki), Germany (Prince Khaled bin Farhan al Saud), Norway, where Iyad Elbaghdadi, a critic of Saudi Arabia resides under government protection, Turkey, as well as Canada.

“As each of these increasingly coercive steps failed, Defendant bin Salman directed teams to locate, detain, and kill his targets regardless of their country of residence — even if that meant blatantly violating the sovereignty of other states,” the lawsuit says.


POTHEAD NATION
More Canadians report smoking pot than in 10 peer countries: survey

A new survey has found one in four Canadian adults reported using cannabis at least once within the period of one year.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

The Commonwealth Fund survey compares Canada’s health systems to 10 other peer countries.

An average of nine per cent of people in the other countries reported the same pot use.

Tracy Johnson, director of health systems analysis for the Canadian Institute for Health Information, says it is not surprising considering Canada is the only country in the survey where cannabis is legal.

She says that means people surveyed in Canada may have felt more comfortable being honest about their marijuana use.

It's the first time the annual survey has asked questions about pot, drinking and vaping.

The survey found a quarter of Canadians reported drinking heavily at least once a month. Canada’s rate was slightly lower than the 32 per cent average among all countries.


The survey also found about five per cent of Canadians used vaping devices like e-cigarettes, compared to four per cent in the peer countries.

The survey took place between March and June, with most interviews occurring in the first two months, and asked about usage in the previous 12 months. Johnson said that means it doesn’t show changing habits due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Because it was early in the pandemic as well, it’s not an indication generally in what happened during the pandemic."

Johnson said it will be important to continue monitoring what is happening. The Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction found increased alcohol use during the pandemic in another poll.

The Commonwealth survey also looked at access to health care, quality of care and cost barriers.

Longer-term results found access to care has not significantly changed over the past 10 years in Canada, Johnson added.

She said once Canadians get a family doctor, they are happy with care. But getting initial access to doctors or specialists remains difficult.

She also said the survey found Canada is behind other countries in the use of technology when it comes to medical records. Johnson said online records have become increasingly important as virtual health care has with COVID-19.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 11, 2021.

Kelly Geraldine Malone, The Canadian Press