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ATLANTIC CANADA
Fredericton
Political Prisoner Freed
By Daron Letts in Fredericton
August 23--A Fredericton activist imprisoned for 18 days in Montreal
following a mass arrest during last month's World Trade Organization
(WTO) protest was denied a "most basic right" by the municipal judge
who oversaw bail hearings for 120 anti-WTO protesters, a Superior Court
judge ruled last week. Municipal Court Judge Denis Laberge should not
have denied Vaughn Barnett's motion to present evidence in his own defence
during his July 29 bail hearing, Justice James Brunton ruled in the
August 15 review of Barnett's hearing.
Shunpiking Online reported on the demonstration in Number One and Vaughn
Barnett's arrest in Number Two.
Protesters arrested during demonstrations in Montreal were effectively
forced to give up the right to protest through strict bail conditions.
"It's the most basic of rights of anyone brought before the courts that
they are allowed to make proof of their position," Brunton stated before
the court, explaining that the Crown should have been required to present
evidence to justify Barnett's further incarceration and that Barnett
should have been provided space to present evidence in his own defence.
In his ruling, Brunton erased most of Barnett's conditions and waived
Barnett's $200 bail -- not because the defendant vowed not to pay, but
because the Crown's case against him was "weak". Barnett said he feels
vindicated by Brunton's decision.
"I shouldn't have been in prison at all, but I chose to be so that I
wouldn't have to sign bail conditions that would compromise my constitutional
rights and put me in a position of cooperating with what I consider
to be fundamentally unjust institutions," Barnett told The Dominion
shortly after his release.
"The bail conditions were arbitrarily imposed on me and I considered
that to be an extension of the unlawful process that started with the
false arrest of almost 200 people in the green zone at the WTO protest."
Barnett points to the continual arrests of people like Jaggi Singh and
Aaron Koleszar as an argument against activists signing away their rights
for a conditional release.
"An activist could be falsely arrested at one demonstration, be subjected
to several bail conditions limiting his or her ability to protest later,
and if the person tries to attend another demonstration the police can
haul him or her into court and use those bail conditions against that
person, claiming that the conditions were breached," he said.
"Eventually, the activist is caged within these restrictions simply
by being persistent and exercising basic constitutional rights."
Barnett, a legal advocate and researcher with a law degree, represented
himself in court with assistance from Montreal lawyer, Denis Poitras.
His trial is set for October 21.
Barnett was held for 42 days in a Quebec prison following the Summit
of the Americas protest in 2001 under similar circumstances.
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