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Prohibiting Cluster Munitions Act

Bill to Amend--Second Reading--Debate Adjourned

April 7, 2022


Moved second reading of Bill S-225, An Act to amend the Prohibiting Cluster Munitions Act (investments).

She said: Honourable senators, I first learned of cluster munitions in the 1980s, when Russian troops dropped cluster munitions across Afghanistan, leaving the countryside riddled with unexploded ordnances to this day.

Bill S-225, the cluster munitions investment prohibition act, would create a provision in the Prohibiting Cluster Munitions Act banning investments in an entity that has breached a prohibition relating to cluster munitions, explosive submunitions and explosive bomblets.

Cluster munitions are weapons designed to carry and disperse multiple explosive submunitions and/or bomblets. These weapons can be dropped from an aircraft or fired from the ground or sea by rockets or artillery. They are designed to open in mid-air and release from tens to thousands of submunitions that have the ability to indiscriminately saturate an area on the ground up to the size of several football fields. Anyone within striking areas of cluster munitions, be they military or civilian, has a substantial chance of being killed or seriously injured.

Also, any ordnance that fails to activate upon landing will effectively turn into a landmine on the ground, posing an immediate threat to the population and also for decades after the conflict is over or until the bombs have been cleared and destroyed.

This is my second time introducing this bill. The closest it has come to reality was during the First Session of the Forty-second Parliament in June 2017.

I would like to thank both Senator Jaffer and former Senator Hubley for speaking on this bill in 2017. Your insights, observations and personal experiences have spurred my determination to put an end to investments in cluster munitions in Canada.

My family has witnessed the destruction of these weapons first-hand. At the height of the Russian invasion of Afghanistan, my uncle, an orthopedic surgeon in Peshawar, Pakistan, treated countless casualties of cluster munitions, who, in desperation, had been brought over the border from Afghanistan by any means possible, including on foot, by donkey, pickup truck, car or bus, seeking medical help.

So many years later, cluster munitions are still claiming the lives of Afghan people. Sadly, I fear we may be witnessing this violent past repeating itself in Ukraine.

A few weeks ago, the UN Human Rights Office announced it had received credible reports of several cases of Russian forces using cluster munitions in populated areas in Ukraine. The International Criminal Court has since opened an investigation into possible war crimes, and testimony from survivors of suspected cluster bomb attacks is chilling. Experts also believe cluster bomblets were used in an attack on a kindergarten in the town of Okhtyrka.

These weapons know no borders and do not discriminate between civilians and soldiers on active duty. Cluster munitions were used during the Karabakh conflict, which ended in November 2020. Once again, the cluster munitions attacks caused civilian casualties, as we are currently witnessing in Ukraine.

The UN Office for Disarmament Affairs has made it clear that all types of cluster munitions cause unacceptable harm to civilians.

According to the International Committee of the Red Cross, cluster munitions, generally being free-falling weapons, are vulnerable to the slightest error or gust of wind, which means they can strike well outside the targeted area.

To make matters worse, the high failure rate of cluster munitions can prevent refugees and internally displaced persons from returning to their homes. The looming threat of these weapons also hampers humanitarian, peace-building and development efforts, including the clearance of mines and cluster munitions.

Travis was a U.S. Marine corporal deployed to Iraq. After most of the hard fighting, he decided to stay and volunteer in the removal of unexploded cluster bombs and landmines. On July 2, 2003, he was killed by an unexploded cluster munition. His mother Lynn now speaks out against the use of cluster munitions, saying:

If even the best trained military personnel can accidentally fall victim to this weapon how on earth do we think we can expect civilians to return to a land littered with them and not fall prey to them.

This, senators, is our biggest fear as we see the conflict in Ukraine.

Despite the Convention on Cluster Munitions’ successful implementation in 26 states parties that have since destroyed their stocks of cluster munitions, we still face many challenges in putting an end to the use of these weapons. A total of 16 producers of cluster munitions have yet to commit to stop production in the future, including China and Russia. Consequently, weapons that are unable to distinguish between combatants and civilians are still being manufactured and used in ongoing conflicts around the world, causing a disproportionate number of civilians to be severely injured or killed each year.

According to the Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor, at least 360 people died or received injuries from cluster bombs in 2020. Casualties from cluster bomb remnants were also higher than for live attacks. Sadly, all recorded victims were civilians and nearly half were children.

Children are particularly at risk of falling victim to cluster munitions because they often mistake unexploded ordnances lying on the ground for toys. In fact, the cluster munitions used in Afghanistan were all disguised as bright toys, and children would reach out to pick them up. The Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor estimates that 44% of the victims of cluster bombs worldwide are children. The number of children injured or killed by cluster bombs has risen since I last spoke on this bill.

As I just mentioned, drawn by their bright colours and toy-like appearances, children often activate unexploded munitions by picking them up, as did 4-year-old Emam who died from injuries he sustained after picking up a cluster bomblet in 2016 in east Aleppo.

Canada was among the first countries to adopt the Convention on Cluster Munitions in 2008. As of September 2021, a total of 110 states parties are adhering to the convention’s comprehensive prohibitions. The convention entered into force on August 1, 2010, and is the sole international instrument dedicated to ending the suffering caused by cluster munitions.

In 2015, Canada ratified the convention and enacted the Prohibiting Cluster Munitions Act. Yet, our current legislation does not reflect our international commitment, and it fails to meet the convention’s standards.

In September 2021, the Cluster Munition Coalition, an international civil society campaign working to eradicate cluster munitions and prevent further harm from the weapons, reported that six Canadian institutions had invested a total of US$5.75 million in companies that manufacture cluster munitions.

When I read this report, I was shocked and horrified to learn that Canadian financial institutions were continuing to invest in the production of these insidious weapons of war following the release of a previous report by the Dutch peace group PAX in 2016, which had revealed that four Canadian financial institutions had invested $565 million in cluster munitions manufacturing.

Honourable senators, I believe this is proof that naming and shaming Canadian institutions that continue to invest in cluster munitions manufacturing is not sufficient to uphold our commitment to the convention. We need stronger legislation. Otherwise, it would be hypocritical of us, as Canadians, to pride ourselves on our country’s humanitarian work abroad.

I was pleasantly surprised to learn that the Convention on Cluster Munitions’ process and substance was modelled upon the Ottawa Convention that banned anti-personnel landmines in the late 1990s.

Unexpectedly, Canada cut its international effort to help clear cluster munitions from Laos in 2012 after contributing more than $2 million between 1996 and 2011. Laos is the most cluster-bomb-contaminated country in the world on a per capita basis. The Vietnam War’s legacy in Laos is not an isolated case and 29 countries remain contaminated by cluster munitions. In 2020, casualties due to cluster munition remnants were recorded in six other countries: Afghanistan, Cambodia, Iraq, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen. Sadly, I think we will be adding Ukraine to that list now.

By continuing to allow Canadian institutions and, through them, fellow Canadians to invest in cluster munitions manufacturing, we are complicit in these avoidable deaths and injuries.

Senators, investing ethically has increasingly become an issue that is important to Canadians. In fact, 70% of Canadians believe it is important to invest in companies with strong environmental, social and governance performance.

The Canadian investment community itself has been seeking clarity regarding the issue of investment in cluster munitions, given that there is no definitive prohibition in the current legislation. Many people to whom I have spoken about this bill have been surprised to learn that our legislation does not include an explicit prohibition against investing in companies that manufacture cluster munitions. They have all expressed grave concern that the financial institutions in which they have entrusted their investments would ever invest their money in these weapons.

Investing in companies that produce cluster munitions is an active choice to support weapons that cause devastating harm, mostly to civilians. They are indiscriminate and inhumane weapons that no Canadian financial institution should be investing in. Additionally, as a banned weapon, they are a poor investment. As more countries have ratified the convention, we have seen that the market for these weapons is starting to dry up — we hope.

If the financial resources required to manufacture these weapons were no longer available to the companies that make them, this would be another positive step toward the eradication of cluster munitions. Together we can significantly enhance the protection of civilians during armed conflict, as well as post‑conflict reconstruction efforts, in concordance with the spirit of the convention.

A subsequent article in the convention states that there can be no reservations with respect to the legal obligations contained within the convention. They must be accepted in their entirety and without exception. I would also like to mention that Canada played a leading role in drafting Article 21 that established clear limitations with respect to interoperability. Other countries, such as France and Belgium — as well as other NATO and non‑NATO states — and the United Nations also value interoperability and do not have such exceptions in their respective laws.

The act in its current form, as stated by former Senator Hubley in 2017, does not go far enough. Bill S-225 aims to bring the Prohibiting Cluster Munitions Act in line with the spirit of the convention. By explicitly prohibiting investments in cluster munitions manufacturing, we would set clear guidelines for Canadian financial institutions that welcomed the idea over a decade ago. Bill S-225 also closes other existing loopholes by prohibiting Canadian financial institutions from loaning funds to these entities and even prevents them from acting as a guarantor for their loans.

The act has important gaps and has received international criticism. When the Standing Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Trade studied Bill C-6, an Act to implement the Convention on Cluster Munitions, in 2014, it heard from almost 30 witnesses. In addition to the need for an explicit prohibition of investment in cluster munitions producers, a section on joint military operations also raised many concerns. The act was also publicly denounced by the International Committee of the Red Cross, and the International Committee to Ban Landmines and Cluster Munitions called it the worst legislation of any state party to the convention. Simply put, the act fails to meet the standards of the convention.

Many countries, including common law countries, have already enacted legislation prohibiting investments in companies that produce cluster munitions. One of the most effective ways to end the production of cluster munitions altogether is to cut financial ties to companies who produce them. This can only be achieved through explicit and definitive legislation.

In 2016, former minister of foreign affairs, the Honourable Stéphane Dion, was optimistic about Canada’s role in disarmament and peace building in an address at a conference marking the twentieth anniversary of the start of the Ottawa Process. He said:

Under Justin Trudeau’s leadership, Canada will again be a leader in disarmament, a leader that works with its international partners to pursue pragmatic but important change. . . .

Canada, as a determined peacebuilder, is committed to making the possible a reality.

Honourable senators, Canada has been a global leader against landmines but has lost its way. The future envisioned by the Honourable Mr. Dion did not come to fruition under the current government.

This is our chance to become leaders against the production and use of cluster munitions by drying up the financial resources to build these weapons. Thank you.

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