Ottawa
Cancels Export of Military Goods and Technology to Turkey
Toronto, – The Hon. Marc Garneau,
Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada, issued a statement cancelling all
valid export permits for all military goods and technology destined to Turkey.
Mr.
Garneau said: “Following this [joint Global Affairs Canada and Department of
National Defence] review, which found credible evidence that Canadian
technology exported to Turkey was used in Nagorno-Karabakh, today I am
announcing the cancellation of permits that were suspended in the fall of
2020.”
The
decision was made because: “This use was not consistent with Canadian foreign
policy, nor end-use assurances given by Turkey.”
Scarborough Agincourt MPP Aris Babikian said: “I am
delighted that the Canadian Government made the principled decision to uphold
Canadian values and principles and not be an accomplice to war crimes.” He
added: “This is encouraging news. Our Prime Minister should press forward and
bring Presidents Erdogan of Turkey and President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan to
the International Criminal Court as war criminals and expel Turkey from the
NATO alliance.”
This decision was the calumniation of relentless
public pressure from the opposition political parties in the House of Commons,
the Senate of Canada, the Ontario and Québec Legislative Assemblies, the
mainstream media, the Armenian National Committee of Canada, Project Ploughshares, Prominent Canadians,
and many civic society organizations.
In
his October 13,
2020 letter to Prime Minister Trudeau and during the Oct. 21 Take-a-Note debate
at the Ontario Legislative Assembly, MPP Babikian urged the Prime Minister to
permanently “Stop supplying Turkey with military or high-tech components.”
Furthermore, he asked the Prime Minister to expel Turkey from NATO and G20.
During a telephone conversation on Monday with Mr.
Garneau, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt
Çavuşoğlu urged Canada to review defence industry restrictions. The Turkish embassy in Ottawa stated:
“We expect our NATO allies to avoid unconstructive steps that will negatively
affect our bilateral relations and undermine alliance solidarity.”
During the 44-day Nagorno Karabakh War last fall,
the Azarbajiani Armey used Turkish Bayraktar2 drones which used Canadian
imaging technology made by L3Harris Wescam of Burlington, Ontario.
Aris Babikian’s Oct. 21 speech at the Ontario Legislative Assembly
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3b304aykseM
MS-Word 2007 document
Global Affirs Canada statme .jpg
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Aris Babikian Letter to the Prime Minister - signed.pdf