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Evacuation tips: Who's a Friend, Who's a Canadian?

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  • Evacuation tips: Who's a Friend, Who's a Canadian?

    Evacuation tips: Who's a Friend, Who's a Canadian?

    The Globe and Mail, Canada
    July 25, 2006

    By Jeffrey Simpson

    Lessons for Canada from the flight from Lebanon: First, don't kick
    your friends needlessly. Second, review dual citizenship.

    By way of first things first, here's a question: which country helped
    most when Canadians tried to rescue people from Lebanon? Answer:
    Turkey.

    With Cyprus filled up, Canada urgently asked for Turkey's help. The
    Turks, whom the Harper government just gratuitously insulted while
    playing domestic politics, could have made up all kinds of excuses
    by way of payback.

    Instead, the Turks turned the other cheek. They took out
    Lebanese-Canadian citizens, rented boats, and put their airfield at
    our disposal. Have they received an official thank you from Prime
    Minister Stephen Harper?

    It's the least Mr. Harper could do after making recognition of the
    90-year-old Armenian "genocide" official government policy such a sore
    point in Turkey that the Turkish government withdrew its ambassador
    to Canada to protest.

    The Harper announcement, delivered almost flippantly in April,
    made headlines in Turkey. Everybody close to the file knew the
    announcement had everything to do with ethnic pandering in Canada,
    part of the Conservative's wider campaign to play ethnic politics.

    Now that the Conservatives have been in office for a little while,
    perhaps they will realize that a country's foreign policy interests
    should not be subordinated to domestic pandering. They might also
    realize that a foreign policy based on realism requires remembering
    which countries are allies and friends, because you never know when
    friends might come in handy.

    As a NATO partner, Turkey is now being asked to contribute to a
    peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon, a force Canada is not being
    asked to join (except by some people in Canada) for the good reason
    that this force needs to be robust. Canada does not have robust
    forces to spare, what with the two-year commitment to Afghanistan,
    a point those urging Canadian participation might remember. The Turks
    (who were in Afghanistan before us) and others will have to do the
    heavy lifting if NATO agrees to inject a force into Lebanon.

    Another lesson concerns dual citizenship. It is way to late to think
    of eliminating dual citizenship, even were the elimination desirable.
    Australia thought of trying to go that route, and gave up. The
    United States once forbade dual citizenship but relented about two
    decades ago.

    Dual citizenship is a fact of life, but it is a misunderstood fact,
    one that a parliamentary committee could usefully explore and explain
    to Canadians.

    We seem to believe that, because a person carries a Canadian passport,
    that person thinks himself as a Canadian and has an absolute right
    to assistance from the Canadian government while outside Canada. Both
    beliefs are false, and potentially dangerous.

    It is worth at least asking whether we have made the acquisition
    of Canadian citizenship so easy - divorcing it, once acquired, from
    residence in the country - that we have spawned legions of citizens
    of convenience. We know that thousands of people worked in Canada,
    earned their pension time here, and live elsewhere clipping Canada
    Pension Plan coupons.

    There's nothing illegal or inherently wrong with that - retired
    Americans in Canada keep getting their Social Security cheques. But
    there are a lot of other people holding Canadian passports around
    the world whose attachment to this country - measured at least by
    time spent here - is, shall we say, somewhat more limited.

    We should also understand that a dual citizenship in another country
    is not always considered a Canadian. For example, a holder of Iranian
    and Canadian passports, or Syrian and Canadian passports, is not
    considered by the authorities in those countries to be a Canadian,
    but rather an Iranian or Syrian.

    Canadian consular help to such dual nationals in those countries is
    limited or non-existent, just as Canada might get upset if a dual
    national caught doing something we consider illegal in Canada tried
    to appeal for help to the Iranian or Syrian governments.

    The same applies to China. The migration to Canada from Hong Kong
    before the Chinese takeover from Britain produced thousands of dual
    citizens, by Canadian law. The Chinese, however, do not recognize dual
    nationalities. If things ever got tense between China and Canada,
    and dual nationals in China appealed to Ottawa for help, it is not
    clear what Canada could do if the Chinese made matters difficult.

    All this is to suggest that a gap can arise between the legal realities
    of being a dual national and the obligations and expectations of
    Canada, especially in times of crisis. [email protected]
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