Canada's war on terror depended on despot's planes
(Edmonton Journal, 18 Mar 05)
Ottawa Citizen
OTTAWA
The Canadian Forces have paid out almost $3.2 million to the national airline of Turkmenistan â †a despotic regime that rivals North Korea in its style of government - to airlift military equipment to Afghanistan.
The 36 Turkmenistan Airlines flights are among the 286 flights that cost Ottawa $90 million. The flights carried heavy equipment to and from Kabul, where Canadian troops have been contributing to NATO's protection force for Afghanistan, and to Kandahar for a 2002 mission, according to figures tabled in the House of Commons last week. Canada also paid the United States Air Force $37 million to fly Canadian soldiers and cargo out of Afghanistan in 2002.
The Forces do not have airlift capacity, but have come under pressure, most recently from departing U.S. ambassador Paul Cellucci, to buy heavy, long-distance cargo planes that would cost billions. Cellucci said recently that buying such aircraft would enable Canada to proudly fly its troops in and out of international hotspots while touting its new 3-D foreign policy; which boasts of the integration of defence, diplomacy and develop mental aid. The Forces are considering buying heavy; long-distance transport planes, but won't make any decisions until the long-awaited review of defence policy is completed later this year.
Canada either rents transport, or buys passage with the U.S. However, the U.S. is growing reluctant to provide airlift because it is stretched militarily in Iraq. On 250 of the flights, the Canadian military equipment was flown mainly on Russian and Ukraine cargo airlines. But on 36 flights, Canada made use of 'Turkmenistan Airlines Ilyushin 76 cargo plane, a long-range military and civilian freighter with a maximum flying range of 6,700 kilometres.
Turkmenistan is a former Soviet Union republic in central Asia. The country is ruled by a president-for-life, Saparmurat Niyazov, who also likes to be called â Å“Turkmenbashi the Great.â ? Niyazov took power in 1991 and has outlawed all opposition parties, dissent and free expression. â Å“The perverse cult of personality around President Niyazov dominates public life and the educational system,â ? writes Human Bights Watch.
Amnesty International calls the human rights situation in the country â Å“appalling.â ? Amnesty blames all of Turkmenistan's human rights woes on Niyazov, and the â Å“cult of personality he has developed.â ? Niyazov has erected statues of himself across the county; including one in the capital, Ashgabat, that rotates so that it always faces the sun. The country of six million people has an unemployment rate of 50 per cent. He has banned opera, ballet, classical music and all other non-Turkmen culture, and has jailed 20,000 dissidents.
Can West News Service