Couillard banalise le nazisme
13 avril 2017
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_ Il accuse les ''Québécois de pratiquer le "racisme systémique''.
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_ Que dire de la colonie Britannique canadienne, alors:
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_ Confronting Painful Pasts: Canada, Great Britain, and the United States (U)
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The pursuit of Nazi war criminals and collaborators in the West had been an on
and off process since the 1980s. In Canada, two undercover reporters from the Jérusalem Post posed as researchers and interviewed suspected war criminals in 1996. The paper's articles led to a television special in Canada the following year discussing what Bernie M. Farber called Canada's "dirty little secret." According to the Simon Wiesenthal Center, Canada had become the home of as many as 3,000 war criminals, half of whom were still alive in the late 1990s.
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_ The Canadian Government had a poor record in terms of investigating and prosecuting these individuals, many of whom had Eastern European backgrounds. By 1997, the Canadians had only brought charges against one man for killing more than 8,000 Jews; the case dissolved when the suspect died just as deportation hearings commenced in British Columbia. Only two other men had been deported from Canada for war crimes in 1982 and 1993.
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In the early 1980s, the Canadian Government had launched a major effort to
identify war criminals in the country. Delays in the legal procedures doomed that effort and not until the mid-1990s did Canada embark upon a reinvigorated strategy, including toll-free telephone numbers, to pinpoint war criminals. 66 Budget cuts in the Canadian office responsible for war crimes investigations also undermined that effort.
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_ In 1997, the Canadian Government announced that it had employed Neal M. Sher, OSI's former director, to beef up Canada's War Crimes Unit. Five years later, in May 2002, Canadian authorities arrested Michael Seifert, who had been convicted by an Italian court in 2000 for his participation at a German concentration camp near Bolzano, Italy. Justice officials, however, warned that extradition proceedings could be quite lengthy.
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_ Anthony DePalma, "Canada Called Haven for Nazi Criminals," New York Times, 3 February 1997, p. A6.
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September 2002, Denis Coderre, the Immigration Minister, asked for a review of Canada's policy of deporting elderly Nazi war criminals. A subsequent review stated, "despite the increasing difficulty of pursuing World War II cases, there is no strong rationale at this point in time for either eliminating or formally reducing the priority of the World War II component of the program."
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Efforts to track down war criminals and collaborators in the United Kingdom
have also met with mixed results. Until the passage of a controversial War Crimes Act in 1991, the British Government could not prosecute individuals who were not British subjects if they had committed crimes outside of Great Britain. Consequently, war criminals lived peacefully in the United Kingdom until the first case in 1995._
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_ Pres. Bill Clinton discovered this in the summer of 1993 when he nominated Army Gen. John Shalikashvili for the position of chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Shortly after Clinton hailed Shalikashvili's rise to the nation's highest military rank from his humble immigrant background, the Simon Wiesenthal Center announced that the general's father had actually been an officer in a Georgian Waffen SS unit.
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_ Source: https://cryptome.org/2016/01/cia-nazi-collaboration.pdf
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Eagle and Swastika:
CIA and Nazi War Criminals and Collaborators (U)
Kevin Conley Ruffner
DECLASS IF I ED AND RELEASED BY
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
SOURCES METHOOSEXEMPT ION 3020
VAN WAR CR IMESOISCLOSURE ACT
DATE 2007
History Staff
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, DC
April 2003