documents

Reading the documents: Adventures in redaction

Highlights from the recently released Afghan detainee documents

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Reading the documents: Notification, policy and concerns

The documents tabled last week can be viewed in their entirety here. Herein, a series of posts on some of the noteworthy files and disclosures contained therein.

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This is the week that was

The Conservatives were bashful. And mysterious. And succinct.

Reading the documents: What the detainees said

Some noteworthy files, including memos that detail allegations of mistreatment

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Revealing inconsistency

Terry Milewski notes two redaction curiosities in the latest raft of documents.

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The work wasn’t done

While the Prime Minister’s Office apparently declines to say whether the opposition leaders were asked if they wished to proceed with the detainee document review, it is clear the panel of judges was not done reviewing some of the material—including documents identified by the government as being subject to cabinet confidence.

The Commons: Two words to say so much

Would a Taliban prisoner by any other name seem just as evil?

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Reading the documents: DFAIT 10

The documents tabled today can be viewed in their entirety here. Herein, a series of posts on some of the noteworthy files and disclosures contained therein.

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Tortured math

When Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird turned up at the podium yesterday afternoon, he announced as follows.

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The early reviews

The Canadian Press reviews some of what was disclosed in yesterday’s document release.

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‘The likelihood was very high’

Stephane Dion, the Liberal MP on the ad hoc committee, offers his take on what he saw in the documents.

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The documents

The 4,000 pages of detainee documents have now been released to reporters.