Honourable Paul Martin                                     Honourable Pierre Pettigrew

Prime Minister of Canada                                   Minister of Foreign Affairs
House of Commons                                             House of Commons
Parliament Buildings                                          Parliament Buildings
Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0A6                                    Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0A6

FAX:613-941-6900    Email: [email protected]       FAX:613-996-9607    Email: [email protected]

Re: Canada's Responsibility to Protect in Sudan

Dear Prime Minister Paul Martin - and - Foreign Minister Pierre Pettigrew,

Canada must do much more to end the ethnic cleansing in Sudan and safeguard
the security of Sudanese civilians at risk. The Sudanese government is
demonstrably unable or unwilling to put an end to these crimes. The case for
humanitarian intervention in Sudan is unavoidable.

The following measures should be supported by Canada:

Humanitarian intervention

Canada should support intervention to protect civilians at risk along the lines
of the plan developed by the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations.
The DPKO plan would deploy 4,000 to 5,000 troops ­to an African Union (AU) force
with financial and logistical support from donor governments (including Canada).

The AU force should be authorized by the UN, but failure to reach agreement
at the UN Security Council should not preclude deployment of such a civilian
protection force. In these exceptional circumstances, faced with ethnic
cleansing and large-scale loss of life, an AU force would conform with
customarily accepted principles conditioning military intervention outside
the authority of the UN Security Council. These norms are outlined in "The
Responsibility to Protect", the report of the Government of Canada sponsored
International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty.

Criminal responsibility

Canada should encourage a formal process of investigation of criminal
responsibility for crimes against humanity committed in Sudan. This could
occur by formal reference from the UN Security Council to the International
Criminal Court, or through some other official investigative commission created
specifically for this purpose.

Sanctions

Canada should encourage the UN Security Council to impose
targeted economic sanctions on the government of Sudan, including an arms
embargo and restrictions on Sudanese oil exports.

Humanitarian aid

Canada should allocate extra funds, in addition to the
$23 to $25 million committed to date, for humanitarian assistance to relieve
the plight of Darfuršs displaced and affected citizens.

Diplomatic engagement

Consistent with the above measures, Canadašs diplomacy should also be more robust
and include high level engagement by the Prime Minister and relevant cabinet
ministers, as well as Canadašs Special Envoy to the peace process in Sudan,
Senator Mobina Jaffer.


The government of Canada supports measures such as the creation of the International
Criminal Court, the Responsibility to Protect report, a "human security" framework
for policy engagement and the NEPAD (New Economic Partnership for African Development,
which encourages the further development of the AU). A stronger commitment to end the
atrocities in Sudan would be fully consistent with Canadašs existing foreign
policy.


Signed:____________________________ Date:________________________________

Name: ____________________________________________________________

Address: ________________________________ Prov. :_______________________________

Postal Code:________________________________