A/HRC/13/23/Add.2
and police mechanisms, including the Police Ethics Commissioner and the Police Ethics
Committee, which were established upon the recommendation of the Human Rights and
Youth Rights Commission. However, police representatives acknowledged that the process
currently fails to have the confidence of the community.
59.
Work is under way to improve the system of independent investigations, providing
additional guarantees regarding impartiality.
60.
The action plan of the government of Quebec, entitled “Diversity: An Added
Value”, contains measures focused on preventing discrimination and racial profiling within
Quebec police forces, including education and measures to hire staff from cultural
communities. On 19 October, 2009, the government of Ontario established the Office of the
Independent Police Review Director as an arms-length agency to accept, process and
oversee the investigation of public complaints against Ontario’s police. British Columbia
has a Diversity Committee that examines policing issues.
61.
There is currently no requirement for ethnically disaggregated data relating to the
criminal justice system, including on stop-and-search rates or arrests. Between 1994 and
2004, African Canadian inmates held in federal prisons comprised approximately 6 per cent
of inmates while African Canadians comprised only 2 per cent of the population.22 The
African Canadian Legal Clinic expressed serious concerns regarding disproportionately
high incarceration rates of African Canadian women, many on drug-related offences. They
stressed that solutions must be considered in the wider context of social inequality and
poverty.
E.
Profiling under national security legislation
62.
The security certificates process is based on provisions within the Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act (2001). Certificates can be issued to non-citizens as a preliminary
step to detain and deport individuals on national security grounds. The independent expert
met an individual who had been detained for considerable periods under security certificate
provisions. He described his treatment as discriminatory and his detention as based only
upon his profile as a man of Arab ethnicity. Numerous civil society groups claim the
powers authorized under these laws are used indiscriminately, are targeted against Muslims
and Arabs, resulting in discriminatory impact, and serve to re-enforce negative stereotypes.
63.
The Government notes that the security certificate process is a legal immigration
proceeding and not a criminal proceeding23 and that it is neither arbitrary nor
indiscriminate. Its aim is to remove non-Canadians who pose a serious threat to national
security or public safety. Certificates are issued in exceptional circumstances24 and with the
approval of two Ministers. Security certificates are referred to a federal court judge who
determines whether the application is reasonable. The federal Government is legally
empowered to use classified information in closed proceedings, however, in 2007, the
Supreme Court ruled that additional safeguards were required. In 2008, the Act to amend
the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (certificate and special advocate) and to make
a consequential amendment to another Act introduced “special advocates” to protect the
interests of subjects during closed proceedings. The legislation requires regular reviews of
22
23
24
GE.10-11860
S. Trevethan and C.J. Rastin, “A profile of visible minority offenders in the federal Canadian
correctional system” (Ottawa, Correctional Service Canada, 2004). Available from www.cscscc.gc.ca/text/rsrch/reports/r144/r144-eng.shtml#il.
See Public Safety Canada website www.publicsafety.gc.ca/prg/ns/seccert-eng.aspx.
Since 1991, 27 individuals have been subject to proceedings.
15