From the Toronto star today:
>At Rights and Democracy, it just gets worse.
Far from cleaning up the dysfunctional agency by removing its chair, Aurel Braun, Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government has opted to express "complete confidence" in the discredited board, and it has named a new president with problematic baggage of his own.
While Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon hailed Gérard Latulippe as the "ideal candidate" in appointing him Monday, he is a political ally with a controversial background.
Latulippe served in former Quebec premier Robert Bourassa's Liberal cabinet (along with Cannon). In 1994, he switched sides and supported Quebec's independence. Recently he has worked for an agency tied to the U.S. Democratic party promoting democracy in Haiti. But he was also an unsuccessful Canadian Alliance candidate in the 2000 federal election. And in 2007 he joined Quebec's sulphurous "identity" debate by voicing concern about the "hyper concentration" of Muslim and other immigrants in Montreal who don't always share Quebecers' values. He is, in short, somewhat of a political chameleon.
His appointment won't likely ease concerns that Harper is determined to make the agency reflexively toe the government's line.
Created by Parliament in Brian Mulroney's days, the Montreal-based agency gets a federal grant of $11 million to promote democracy and rights abroad. The ruling Conservatives apparently didn't like the agency's support for groups critical of Israel. Accordingly, Braun and others who reflect the government's pro-Israel stance were named to the agency's board, in what some saw as a hostile takeover.
Last month the revamped board "repudiated" grants to Palestinian and Israeli groups that document rights abuses in Gaza and the West Bank. Braun and his allies said at least one of the groups had "terrorist" ties. After the tumultuous board meeting, Rémy Beauregard, president of Rights and Democracy, died of a heart attack.
That plunged the agency into turmoil. The overwhelming majority of staffers demanded that Braun resign, along with his close allies. Several staffers were suspended. A private investigator was called in. A forensic audit is in the works. The staff union says a "witch hunt" is now on, working conditions are "intolerable," and staff face "religious profiling and intimidation."
Now Cannon expects Latulippe to work "in lockstep" with a board that is at war with its staff. As Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff points out, this will just add to the chaos. Canada's image doesn't need that.<