OTTAWA: Amid heavy Israeli bombardment in Gaza, human rights advocates are accusing Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government of misleading the public over weapons to Israel, which have come under greater scrutiny, Al Jazeera reported on Saturday.
According to the report, at issue is legislation that prohibits the government from exporting military equipment to foreign actors if there is a risk it can be used in human rights abuses.
But regulatory loopholes, combined with a lack of clarity over what Canada sends to Israel, have complicated efforts to end the transfers, according to the report.
Dozens of Canadian civil society groups this month urged Trudeau to end arms exports to Israel, arguing they violate Canadian and international law because the weapons could be used in the Gaza Strip.
But in the face of mounting pressure since Israel’s war on Gaza began on October 7, Canada’s foreign affairs ministry has tried to downplay the state’s role in helping Israel build its arsenal.
“Global Affairs Canada can confirm that Canada has not received any requests, and therefore not issued any permits, for full weapon systems for major conventional arms or light weapons to Israel for over 30 years,” the department said on Friday.
“The permits which have been granted since October 7, 2023, are for the export of non-lethal equipment,” it added.
But advocates say this misrepresents the total volume of Canada’s military exports to Israel, which accounts for more than USD 15 million (21.3 million Canadian dollars) in 2022, according to the government’s own figures.
Al Jazeera reported that it also shines a spotlight on the nation’s longstanding lack of transparency around these transfers.
“Canadian companies have exported over [84 million, 114 million Canadian dollars] in military goods to Israel since 2015 when the Trudeau government was elected,” said Michael Bueckert, vice president of Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East, an advocacy group.
“And they have continued to approve arms exports since October 7 despite the clear risk of genocide in Gaza,” Bueckert said.
“Unable to defend its own policy, this government is misleading Canadians into thinking that we aren’t exporting weapons to Israel at all. As Canadians increasingly demand that their government impose an arms embargo on Israel, politicians are trying to pretend that the arms trade doesn’t exist,” he added.
While Canada may not transfer full weapons systems to Israel, the two countries enjoy “a consistent arms trade relationship,” said Kelsey Gallagher, a researcher at Project Ploughshares, a peace research institute.
The vast majority of Canada’s military exports to Israel come in the form of parts and components. These typically fall into three categories, electronics and space equipment; military aerospace exports and components; and finally, bombs, missiles, rockets and general military explosives and components.
But beyond these broad categories, which were gleaned by examining Canada’s own domestic and international reports on weapons exports, Gallagher said it remains unclear “what these actual pieces of technology are”.
“We don’t know what companies are exporting them. We don’t know exactly what their end use is,” he told Al Jazeera.
“What does this mean? No one knows because there’s no definition of that and it really could be quite a number of things,” said .
Al Jazeera reported that Henry Off, a Toronto-based lawyer and board member of the group Canadian Lawyers for International Human Rights (CLAIHR) suspected that Canadian military components are reaching Israel via the United States, including for installation in fighter jets such as the F-35 aircraft.
But these transfers are difficult to track because a decades-old deal between Canada and the US – 1956’s Defence Production Sharing Agreement–has created “a unique and comprehensive set of loopholes that are afforded to Canadian arms transfers to the US,” said Gallagher.
Despite these hurdles, Canadian human rights advocates are pressuring the government to end its weapons sales to Israel, particularly in light of the Israeli war in Gaza.
Still, Canada insists that it maintains one of the strongest arms export control regimes in the world.
Asked whether his government intends to end arms transfers to Israel, Trudeau said in Parliament on January 31 that Canada “puts human rights and protection of human rights at the centre of all our decision-making.”
“It has always been the case and we have been consistent in making sure that we are responsible in the way we do that. We will continue to be so,” the Canadian Prime Minister said.
Gallagher, at Project Ploughshares, told Al Jazeera, that Canada maintains “a level of permissibility” in choosing which countries it chooses to arm, including Israel. (ANI)