Showing posts with label Minister of Foreign Affairs John Baird. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Minister of Foreign Affairs John Baird. Show all posts

03 February 2015

John Baird Resigning As Foreign Affairs Minister, Sources Say

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2015/02/02/john-baird-resigns_n_6600644.html?

John Baird Resigning As Foreign Affairs Minister, Sources Say

Posted: Updated: 
JOHN BAIRDed to resign from his position this week, sources confirm to The Huffington Post Canada.
An announcement could come as early as Tuesday, CBC News reports.
UPDATE: Baird has announced he is leaving federal politics.
Baird, 45, has held a number of high-profile portfolios in Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s cabinet since Conservatives won government in 2006, including Treasury Board president, environment, and transport. He was promoted to foreign affairs after the 2011 election.
Baird has represented the Ontario riding of Ottawa West–Nepean for nine years but has reportedly told his staff he will not run in the next federal election, scheduled for October 19 of this year. The Canadian Press reports International Trade Minister Ed Fast appears poised to take over as acting foreign minister.
A source told HuffPost that Baird has accepted a job in the private sector.
Baird may be stepping down quickly to avoid perceptions of a conflict of interest. Alberta Premier Jim Prentice, who formerly served as Harper's environment minister, also resigned from cabinet after accepting a job with CIBC in 2010 and discussing the matter with the ethics commissioner. Baird ended up acting as Prentice's replacement for a short while.
When the news broke Monday night, some speculated the move could be related to former Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd's recent musings that he wants Baird to help him reform the United Nations World Health Organization. Rudd, the head of the Independent Commission on Multilateralism, met with Baird in Ottawa last week.
A politician for most of his adult life, Baird was first elected to the Ontario legislature at the age of 26 and served at Queen’s Park from 1995 to 2005. He held portfolios in the cabinets of premiers Mike Harris and Ernie Eves.
Some believed Baird was interested in running for the leadership of the Ontario PCs but the deadline to join the race passed last Friday at noon.
Baird is the second key member of Harper's cabinet to resign in a year. Jim Flaherty stepped down as finance minister last March and passed away in April.
Baird's departure also comes at a less-than-ideal time for Harper. An effective communicator and veteran parliamentarian, Baird could have been counted on to help the government score some political points with the recently tabled anti-terrorism bill and evolving mission against ISIS.
His exit could also put another riding in play with a federal election just months away. Ottawa West-Nepean was held for years by the Liberals until Baird made the jump to federal politics and is currently held by Grits at the provincial level.

04 January 2015

Canada's Strong Voice in the World: Baird Reflects on 2014 - DFATD

To view this document on the department website, please click on the following link:
http://www.international.gc.ca/media/aff/news-communiques/2014/12/27a.aspx

Canada's Strong Voice in the World: Baird Reflects on 2014

December 27, 2014 - Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird today released the following statement reflecting on 2014 and on Canada's foreign policy:
"The end of 2014 marks the close of an unprecedented year in the fight for freedom and security around the world. We saw Russia rip up international law and use a military invasion to annex part of a sovereign nation. We saw the so-called Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant [ISIL] and all its gruesome brutality spread like a cancer through Iraq and Syria. And we saw Hamas terrorists try to instill fear in the Israeli people by deliberately targeting civilians with thousands of rockets and mortar shells through the air and with tunnels of terror underground.
"Canada has always approached global challenges from a principled position. We believe that the Kremlin's expansionism flies in the face of decades of international order and must be confronted. This is why Canada has answered Ukrainians' calls for help in maintaining their freedom and democracy and why Canada has led efforts to isolate Russia economically and politically. We believe that ISIL's actions against innocent civilians in Iraq and Syria, including members of religious and ethnic minorities, are barbaric. ISIL's expansion is a threat to international peace and security, and to Canada and Canadians. This is why Canada has joined the international coalition fighting against ISIL in Iraq, it is why we have worked to protect religious minorities and it is why we have delivered much-needed humanitarian assistance to those fleeing the violence in Iraq and Syria. And we believe that there is no moral equivalence between liberal democracies and terrorist groups, which is why we have strongly supported Israel's right to defend itself by itself.
"But while the world may seem more tumultuous than ever, there have been rays of hope and progress from all corners. Under the leadership of Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Canada is saving the lives of millions of mothers and children across the globe with the Maternal, Newborn and Child Health Initiative. Canada has also led the charge at the UN and around the world in the cause of ending child, early and forced marriage and on standing with the people of Iran and North Korea. Elsewhere—from Burma to Tunisia to Afghanistan and places in between—Canada has nurtured the flame of democracy so that others may enjoy the freedoms that we in Canada are blessed with.
"Canadians can be proud of the role their country has played around the world in 2014. We have stood up strongly abroad for Canadian values and interests and the principles that make our country strong and free and the envy of the world."
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Media Relations Office
Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada
343-203-7700
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27 March 2014

Reminder - Remembering Our Past, Preparing for Our Future


 

To view this document on the department website, please click on the following link:
http://www.international.gc.ca/media/aff/advisories-avis/2014/03/26a.aspx

Reminder - Remembering Our Past, Preparing for Our Future

Modernizing Canadian diplomacy for the 21st century
March 26, 2014 - Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird will speak on the foreign policy legacy of former Prime Minister John G. Diefenbaker and how Canada is building a modern diplomacy for the 21st century.
The speech will be delivered to an audience of Canadian diplomats and colleagues at Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada, as well as other stakeholders, students and academics.
Baird will use this opportunity to launch volume 29 of the series "Documents on Canadian External Relations"—the final volume chronicling Diefenbaker's foreign policy during his tenure as Canada's 13th prime minister.
The speech will be webcast live on the department's Internet site.
Event 1: Speech: "Remembering Our Past, Preparing for Our Future"
Date: Thursday, March 27, 2014
Time: 10:30 a.m. ET
Location: Cadieux Auditorium, Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada, 125 Sussex Drive, Ottawa, Ontario
Event 2: Media availability
Date: Thursday, March 27, 2014
Time: 11:20 a.m. ET
Location: Lobby, Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada, 125 Sussex Drive, Ottawa, Ontario
Please note that this event is open only to journalists accredited with the Canadian Parliamentary Press Gallery.
For more information, please contact:
Media Relations Office
Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada
613-995-1874
media@international.gc.ca
Follow us on Twitter: @DFATDCanada
 

news-nouvelles@international.gc.ca: Canada Recognizes Experience of Jewish Refugees

 

To view this document on the department website, please click on the following link:
http://www.international.gc.ca/media/aff/news-communiques/2014/03/26a.aspx

Canada Recognizes Experience of Jewish Refugees

March 26, 2014 - Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird today issued the following statement after the House of Commons concurred with the recommendations in the report by the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Development to recognize the experience of Jewish refugees from the Middle East and North Africa:
"I am pleased that the House of Commons agreed with the recommendation of the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Development, which is supported by the Government of Canada, and officially recognizes the experience of Jewish refugees who were displaced from states in the Middle East and North Africa after 1948.
"Fair and equal acknowledgement of all refugee populations arising out of the Arab-Israeli conflict requires the recognition of Jewish refugees. Such recognition does not diminish or compete with the situation of Palestinian refugees.
"The Government of Canada agrees in principle with the committee's second recommendation, that the experience of Jewish refugees should be taken into consideration as a part of any just and comprehensive peace deal, however, we believe that the peace process as it is currently structured offers the best hope for a positive solution.
"I thank the committee for its efforts and its continuing interest in the issues of human rights and religious freedom in the Middle East and North Africa.
"Canada continues to advocate for a comprehensive, two-state solution reached through a negotiated agreement between the two parties that guarantees Israel's right to live in peace and security with its neighbours and leads to the establishment of a viable and independent Palestinian state."
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For further information, media representatives may contact:
Media Relations Office
Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada
613-995-1874
media@international.gc.ca
Follow us on Twitter: @DFATDCanada


 

13 February 2014

Canada-U.K. Joint Declaration Refreshed

Source: http://www.international.gc.ca/media/aff/news-communiques/2014/02/12b.aspx?lang=eng

Canada-U.K. Joint Declaration Refreshed

British foreign secretary and Canadian foreign affairs minister take part in second annual meeting to review and refresh Canada-U.K. Joint Declaration
February 12, 2014 - William Hague, Britain’s Foreign Secretary, and John Baird, Canada’s Foreign Affairs Minister, met today for their second annual meeting to review and refresh the Canada-United Kingdom Joint Declaration, originally endorsed by prime ministers Stephen Harper and David Cameron in September 2011.
The two ministers met ahead of the London Conference on Illegal Wildlife Trade, discussing a range of key issues for the bilateral relationship.
As well as renewing the objectives set under the joint declaration, the ministers discussed Syria, Iran, Somalia, the Commonwealth and the importance of continuing to promote and protect fundamental human rights, including religious freedom.
Baird recognized the commitment of the United Kingdom in combatting sexual violence in conflict zones, and Foreign Secretary Hague commended Canada for its leadership in fighting the scourge of early and forced marriage.
The two ministers also addressed key themes of collaboration, including jobs, growth and the importance of the successful conclusion of a free trade deal between the European Union and Canada. This ambitious agreement-in-principle will stimulate long-term trade and investment in both the Canadian and British economies.
Foreign Secretary Hague said:
“We have a strong and healthy relationship with Canada, to which we are fully committed. We will work together on our priorities, including arriving at free trade and a nuclear deal with Iran, abolishing sexual violence in conflict areas and striving for political stability in the Middle East. Together, we can achieve a great amount, and I am pleased to welcome Minister Baird here to reinforce the Canada-U.K. Joint Declaration.”
Baird said:
“Canada and the U.K. have made excellent progress on the commitments made under the joint declaration. We have also identified a range of issues for enhanced bilateral collaboration, including a commitment to continue efforts to bring an end to sexual violence in conflict zones and to eliminate child, early and forced marriage. I am very pleased to join Foreign Secretary Hague in endorsing this year’s review and refresh of the joint declaration.”
Baird and Foreign Secretary Hague also spoke about the illegal wildlife trade conference taking place in London and hosted by Prime Minister David Cameron. They pledged to work in partnership to reduce demand for illegal wildlife products and to support the development of sustainable livelihoods for communities affected by the trade.
For the complete text of the ministers’ joint declaration, please consult Canada-United Kingdom Joint Declaration.
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For further information, media representatives may contact:
Media Relations Office
Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada
613-995-1874
media@international.gc.ca
Follow us on Twitter: @DFATDCanada

30 January 2014

Foreign Affairs Trade and Development Canada: Baird Hails Breakthrough in Yemen

 
To view this document on the department website, please click on the following link:
http://www.international.gc.ca/media/aff/news-communiques/2014/01/29b.aspx

Baird Hails Breakthrough in Yemen

January 29, 2014 - Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird issued the following statement congratulating the Yemeni people on the National Dialogue Conference:
"I applaud President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi and the delegates to the National Dialogue Conference on their historic breakthrough in Yemen's political transition. While the country faces extremely difficult economic and security challenges, the people of Yemen have clearly spoken for a more open society that respects freedom, democracy, human rights and the rule of law.
"Canada congratulates Yemen on the Conference's important recommendation to ban child, early and forced marriages, a subject on which I co-hosted a signature event during the 68th Session of the United Nations General Assembly. This and other recommendations, including those to establish an anti-corruption agency and to ensure that more women are included in public office, are key steps in building an inclusive democracy and assuring the rule of law.
"Canada remains staunchly supportive of Yemen in this transition. Yemen's new commitment to federalism is a key step toward free and fair democratic elections, one that Canada strongly supports."
A backgrounder follows.
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For further information, media representatives may contact:
Media Relations Office
Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada
613-995-1874
media@international.gc.ca
Follow us on Twitter: @DFATDCanada

Backgrounder - Yemen's National Dialogue Conference

The National Dialogue Conference was established to chart the way forward in Yemen's democratic transition, which began in 2011 with the ousting of former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, who had been in power for 33 years. The Dialogue invited the participation of all Yemeni political parties and a wide cross-section of non-governmental organizations. The Dialogue concluded on January 25, 2014, after 10 months of discussions. It provided approximately 1,400 recommendations that will guide the drafting of Yemen's new constitution.
Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada (DFATD) funded a series of workshops across Yemen organized by the Ottawa-based Forum of Federations. The workshops discussed federal models of government in Canada and other countries; the first was held in December 2012.
These workshops responded to Yemenis' interest in redesigning their political structure and adapting it toward greater decentralization while maintaining national unity—a theme that has come out strongly in the conclusions of the National Dialogue. In addition, the Forum of Federations will provide technical assistance and training to Yemenis engaged in drafting their new constitution.
DFATD, through the Canada Fund for Local Initiatives, also supports local projects that promote ending child, early and forced marriages in Yemen and that seek to create norms that more broadly support the rights of women.


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27 January 2014

Canada Welcomes Recent Progress in Tunisia's Democratic Transition

          To view this document on the department website, please click on the following link:
http://www.international.gc.ca/media/aff/news-communiques/2014/01/26a.aspx

Canada Welcomes Recent Progress in Tunisia's Democratic Transition

January 26, 2014 - Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird today issued the following statement:
"Canada welcomes the progress made in Tunisia's democratic transition with the adoption today of a new constitution. We look forward to working with the new government and urge the National Constituent Assembly to adopt an electoral law and hold elections as soon as possible.
"Tunisians have demonstrated a strong will to build a new, vibrant, open and democratic Tunisia, and we encourage them to continue down this path.
"The new constitution guarantees women's equal rights, promotes parity between men and women in elected assemblies and seeks to prevent violence against women.
"In its protection of human rights, Tunisia's new constitution guarantees freedom of conscience and belief and the free exercise of worship. We are encouraged by the unequivocal language in the new constitution that explicitly bans accusations of apostasy. Tunisians have demonstrated that they will not tolerate the misuse of religion to incite violence.
"We would like to congratulate Tunisia's outgoing prime minister, Ali Laarayedh, and to wish Tunisia's new prime minister-designate Mehdi Jomaa well on his important mandate leading to the next elections.
"We encourage all Tunisians to continue to work together to build a free, open and democratic Tunisia."
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For further information, media representatives may contact:
Media Relations Office
Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada
613-995-1874
media@international.gc.ca
Follow us on Twitter: @DFATDCanada
 

26 January 2014

Canada: Diplomatic Appointments

         To view this document on the department website, please click on the following link:
http://www.international.gc.ca/media/aff/news-communiques/2014/01/24c.aspx

Diplomatic Appointments

January 24, 2014 - Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird today announced the following diplomatic appointments:
Douglas George becomes Consul General of Canada in Detroit (United States of America).
Jean-Pierre Hamel becomes Consul General of Canada in Monterrey (United Mexican States).
Roy Norton becomes Consul General of Canada in Chicago (United States of America).
James Villeneuve becomes Consul General of Canada in Los Angeles (United States of America).
A biographical note on the appointees follows.
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For further information, media representatives may contact:
Media Relations Office
Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada
613-995-1874
media@international.gc.ca
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Biographical Notes

Douglas George (BSc [Zoology], University of Toronto, 1980; MBA, Queen's University, 1982) joined the Department of External Affairs in 1982 as a desk officer for the Commercial Policy Division. In Ottawa, has served in the Consular Operations Bureau, the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) Affairs Division and the U.S. Trade and Economic Policy Division. Mr. George also served as a senior departmental assistant in the Office of the Minister of International Trade, director of the Softwood Lumber Division and as director of the Intellectual Property, Information and Communications Technology Trade Policy Division. In 2009, he became director of the Tariffs and Goods Market Access Division and lead goods negotiator on a number of FTA negotiations, including those with the EU, South Korea and India. Abroad, Mr. George served in Kingston and at Canada's Mission to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade in Geneva. From 2000 to 2004, he was counsellor at the Mission of Canada to the European Union. Mr. George has been Canada's ambassador to Kuwait since 2011. He replaces Roy Norton.
Jean-Pierre Hamel (LLB, Université de Sherbrooke, 1983; Diploma [International Development], University of Ottawa, 1984) joined the Department of External Affairs in 1986. In Ottawa, Mr. Hamel served in the Export Finance, the General Trade Policy and the Western Europe divisions. He also worked on secondment for the Canadian International Development Agency as program manager for the Asia Branch (Private Sector Division). Mr. Hamel worked extensively abroad, serving in junior roles in Yaoundé and Bonn, as senior trade commissioner in Tunis, Havana and Bogotá, and as head of office in both Johannesburg and Chennai. He has also served as deputy head of mission and counsellor (commercial) in Algiers. Mr. Hamel is currently senior trade commissioner for Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean at the High Commission in Bridgetown. He replaces François Lafond.
Roy Norton (BA Honours [History], Carleton University, 1975; MA [Canadian History], Carleton University, 1976; MPA [U.S. Policy Development], Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, 1990; MIPP [International Economics], Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, 1993; PhD [International Relations], Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, 1999) has had a diverse career, serving as legislative assistant in both the House of Commons and the Senate, as senior policy advisor to the Minister of Foreign Affairs, and as a public policy consultant before working extensively for the Government of Ontario.  With the Government of Ontario, Mr. Norton was executive director (international relations), chief of protocol, president and CEO of Ontario Exports Inc., assistant deputy minister (export development), and assistant deputy minister (international relations). Abroad, Mr. Norton has been posted twice to Washington, D.C., and is currently consul general in Detroit. He replaces Gitane DeSilva.
James Villeneuve (BA, Carleton University, 1985) retired from Anheuser Busch InBev, the world's largest brewing company and the parent company of Labatt Breweries, after more than 27 years. He started with Labatt in Toronto in sales and marketing and was later transferred to Vancouver, where he was regional director of government affairs for Western Canada. In 1995, Mr. Villeneuve returned to Toronto to manage Labatt's rebranding initiative and to run the company's corporate and sports properties. He later became director of corporate affairs and then vice-president of corporate affairs for Canada. From 2007 to 2009, Mr. Villeneuve worked in Brussels to lead InBev's global corporate affairs practice. After InBev purchased Anheuser Busch in 2009, Mr. Villeneuve moved to St. Louis to lead the company's North American corporate affairs department.  Mr. Villeneuve has served on many boards during his career, including the Toronto Economic Development Commission, the Metro Toronto Convention Centre, the 2008 Toronto Olympic Bid, the Granville Island Trust, the Association of Canadian Advertisers, Carleton University, the Canadian Club, Teach for America, the United Way and the Regional Chamber and Growth Association in St. Louis. Mr. Villeneuve is married to Kim Walker-Villeneuve and they have two children, Grace and Andrew. He replaces David Fransen.

24 January 2014

Ministers Fast and Baird Meet Canadian Business Leaders in Davos - 24 January 2014

To view this document on the department website, please click on the following link:
http://www.international.gc.ca/media/comm/photos/2014/01/24b.aspx

Ministers Fast and Baird Meet Canadian Business Leaders in Davos

Left Side (front to back):
John Beck, Chairman and CEO, Aecon Group Inc.; Donald Lindsay, President and CEO, Teck Resources Limited; the Honourable Ed Fast, Minister of International Trade; Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird; Monique Leroux, Chair of the Board, President and CEO, Desjardins Group; Mark Wiseman, President and CEO, Canada Pension Plan Investment Board; and Kim Samuel-Johnson, Owner and Director, The Samuel Group of Companies
Right Side (front to back):
Peter Munk, Founder and Chairman of the Board, Barrick Gold Corporation; John Manley, President and CEO, Canadian Council of Chief Executives; Pierre Beaudoin, President and CEO, Bombardier Inc.; Dominic Barton, Global Managing Director, McKinsey & Company; Steve Williams, President and CEO, Suncor Energy Inc.; and Charles Sirois, Chair of the Board, CIBC

January 24, 2014 - Davos, Switzerland - The Honourable Ed Fast, Minister of International Trade, and Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird meet with Canadian business leaders at the World Economic Forum (WEF). During a round-table session, the ministers heard Canadian business leaders' perspectives on the policy tools, regulatory frameworks and trade agreements that will help their companies succeed at home and in global markets.
The ministers highlighted how the Government of Canada continues to increase Canada's competitiveness and economic strength by implementing ambitious trade-expansion plans, including an agreement-in-principle on the Canada-European Union trade agreement.
The WEF is an annual meeting that brings together the world's top decision makers from government, business and civil society. This year's meeting is taking place in Davos, Switzerland, from January 22 to 25.
For more information, please see Ministers Fast and Baird Promote Canada's Economic Leadership at World Economic Forum.
Download this photo.
For further information, media representatives may contact:
Rudy Husny
Press Secretary
Office of the Honourable Ed Fast
Minister of International Trade
613-992-7332
Media Relations Office
Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development Canada
613-995-1874
media@international.gc.ca
Follow us on Twitter: @Canada_Trade


 

22 January 2014

Address by Minister Baird at Geneva II Talks on Syria - Date: 22 January 2014

To view this document on the department website, please click on the following link:
http://www.international.gc.ca/media/aff/speeches-discours/2014/01/22a.aspx

Address by Minister Baird at Geneva II Talks on Syria

January 22, 2014 - Montreux, Switzerland
Check Against Delivery
Ladies, gentlemen, representatives.
It is good that we have reconvened here to affirm Geneva I. I very much appreciate the work that has gone into today. But what we say and do here must have meaning. And purpose.
What we say and do here must not ignore the guns that continue to fire in the valleys of Syria or the planes that bombard the buildings where innocent civilians dwell.
More than 130,000 Syrians have been killed, countless more murdered and maimed. Millions have been displaced. Syria's ancient cities and peaceful villages have been reduced to rubble. Syria's rich social fabric of tolerance and diversity has been torn asunder, and a generation of Syrian boys and girls have lost their childhood.
Each day, and in every moment, Syria's children are becoming members of a lost generation, learning about brutal violence rather than science, math or literature.
Let us be absolutely clear-eyed about how we have arrived in this moment. This war began because Assad refused to respect the basic demands of his own people for their right to freedom. Assad tried to crush the peaceful demands of ordinary Syrians with unrestrained savagery. Assad declared war on Syria for the sake of his own personal privilege and power. And Assad turned his country's arsenal—including his chemical weapons—against the very people he had the duty to protect.
As a civil war that he engineered rages around him, he has been cold. Calculating. He created the very circumstances he needed to convince us that his absolute rule would be essential to Syria's stability.
Assad's war created a vacuum that has been readily filled by terrorists. He has invited the terrorist organization Hezbollah and its state sponsor, Iran, into this conflict through the front door and opened the back door to Al-Qaeda affiliates like the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant and Jabat Al Nusra.
The terrorist threat that is developing in Syria is real. It is a threat to the stability of the entire region and beyond. It is a war we have seen before on the streets of Baghdad, and its agents are ones who have been hardened by the wars of the last decade.
But this war did not start as a war against terrorism—as the Assad regime cynically claims. This war began—and remains at its core—a fight for the rights, dignity and freedom of the Syrian people.
A political solution that addresses that reality is the only way for Syria to begin to recover from the catastrophe of this war. Until the dignity and freedom demanded by the Syrian people are enshrined in a peaceful settlement and the institutions that will uphold it, this war will not end, the terrorist threat will increase, the human nightmare will continue, and the violence will threaten all of Syria's neighbours.
I would like to recognize the generosity of the governments and people of the region who are hosting Syrian refugees, particularly Jordan, Lebanon, Iraq and Turkey. Canada has also responded generously to support the humanitarian needs of the Syrian people.
This assistance is essential, and its generosity cannot be abused by strengthening a tyrant's false claims to legitimacy in the way it is delivered. It reduces the suffering of Syria's people. But all the generosity of Syria's friends will not restore their hope or bring their country back.
We come here now to begin to put an end to this conflict. In the face of the destruction of a proud nation and the complexity of the task ahead, it is easy to be pessimistic.
But just by being here and finally starting to talk directly, the various sides of this civil war are taking a first step toward peace. We cannot let our pessimism or our sadness at what Syria has become diminish this achievement. The Geneva principles provide the road map to that goal.
This is the only path forward from today's devastation to the country that Syria's people—whatever their religion, sect or ethnicity—deserve. Syria's rich history, culture and tradition of civility is a legacy that must be secured for future generations. This is the task that faces the Syrian delegations in the days and weeks ahead.
Canada calls on all Syrians to commit to work at becoming partners in peace and fully implement the Geneva I communiqué, including the establishment of a transitional governing authority. I urge Syrians to work together to address urgent needs, and begin to build confidence, by ensuring humanitarian access in all areas, proceeding with prisoner exchanges and negotiating local cease-fires.
Canada recognizes how difficult it has been for the Syrian opposition to come to the table—often in the face of death threats. I commend them for their courage, and they will need even greater courage as we proceed down the path to peace.
At the same time we call on Syria's opposition to adopt, without any ambiguity, the vision of a future Syria that respects human rights and accepts Syria's diversity. Syria's leaders need to represent and reflect the interests of all of Syria's men, women and children.
We call on the opposition to clearly reject the extremists in their midst and fully embrace—in word and deed—democratic values and the principles of tolerance. We call on the opposition that shares these values to share in their leadership on behalf of the Syrian people. It will be difficult, noble, hard-won teamwork that will bear the result they seek. And true teamwork requires leaders who can work with one another.
The road ahead is indeed difficult, but we are compelled forward by the clarion call from those who led us in a different time and shaped a different peace: It isn't enough to talk about peace. You must believe in it. And it isn't enough to believe in it. You must work at it.
These words were Eleanor Roosevelt's, and they challenge each and every one of you around the table today to decide if you believe in peace or not.
It is time for the leaders of Syria to put the people of Syria first. Syria's history, its potential and its future is bigger than the narrow interests of the Assad family or differences of opinion within the opposition.
Determining Syria's future is in your hands, all of you. The moral challenge of reconciliation and rebuilding lies ahead of you. One hundred and thirty thousand of your fellow Syrians have died in this war, and you owe them—and all Syrians who are suffering today—a Syria that is peaceful, prosperous and free. Canada stands with you in your endeavour.
Thank you.


20 January 2014

Prime Minister of Canada Stephen Harper: PM announces visit to the Middle East

Source:
 http://www.pm.gc.ca/news/2014/01/17/pm-announces-visit-middle-east#sthash.krUpgjYf.41tz8xsw.dpuf

PM announces visit to the Middle East

Ottawa, Ontario
17 January 2014
Introduction
Prime Minister Stephen Harper today announced that he will be visiting Israel, the West Bank, and Jordan from January 18 to 25, 2014. During his first official visit to the Middle East, the Prime Minister will meet with political and business leaders as well as various community and business stakeholders, with a view to promoting commercial relations, advancing peace and security, and reinforcing the principles of democracy and good governance in the region.

While in Israel from January 19-22, Prime Minister Harper will meet with Benjamin Netanyahu, Prime Minister of the State of Israel, and Shimon Peres, President of the State of Israel, to discuss ways to increase trade and further strengthen the significant bilateral relations that already exists between the two countries, including in the areas of science and technology. The leaders will also discuss the Middle East Peace Process and regional security, including the persistent threat posed by the regime in Iran and the instability in Syria.

The Prime Minister will also travel to the West Bank on January 20 to meet with Mahmoud Abbas, President of the Palestinian Authority. Canada supports the Palestinian Authority’s efforts to build the institutions and infrastructure necessary for a viable Palestinian state established through a negotiated agreement with the Jewish State of Israel.

Finally, Prime Minister Harper will travel to Jordan from January 22-25, where he will meet with His Majesty King Abdullah II of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan and Abdullah Ensour, Prime Minister of the HashemiteKingdom of Jordan. Jordan is a strong and reliable partner for Canada in the Middle East. The Prime Minister’s visit to Jordan will provide an opportunity to deepen the overall bilateral relationship and recognize Jordanians for the generosity and compassion they have shown in welcoming refugees from Syria into their country. Our Government appreciates Jordan’s leadership in the pursuit of peace and security in the Middle East and their efforts to bring about an end to the conflict.

Quick Facts
  • Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s visit to the Middle East is the first by a sitting Canadian Prime Minister in more than a decade.
  • The visit was first announced on December 1, 2013, during the 2013 Negev Dinner in Toronto.
  • The Prime Minister will be accompanied by a substantial delegation in keeping with the importance of this trip, including: John Baird, Minister of Foreign Affairs; Jason Kenney, Minister of Employment and Social Development and Minister for Multiculturalism; Christian Paradis, Minister of International Development and Minister for La Francophonie; James Moore, Minister of Industry; Ed Fast, Minister of International Trade; and Joe Oliver, Minister of Natural Resources.
Quotes
“Canada has strong people-to-people ties and growing commercial relations with the Middle East and strongly supports a just and lasting peace in the region, which would greatly benefit Israelis and Palestinians alike. I look forward to exploring ways of increasing economic cooperation with our partners while promoting the fundamental Canadian values of democracy, freedom, good governance and respect for the rule of law that are the foundations for peace.” - Prime Minister Stephen Harper

- See more at: http://www.pm.gc.ca/news/2014/01/17/pm-announces-visit-middle-east#sthash.krUpgjYf.41tz8xsw.dpuf