Dear friends,
I am writing to encourage you to pick up a copy of Kerry Pither's Dark Days: The Story of Four Canadians Tortured in the Name of Fighting Terror. It is a compelling and important account of what happened to the men whose stories were the subject of the Iacobucci Inquiry: Ahmad El Maati, Abdullah Almalki, Maher Arar and Muayyed Nureddin.
Unlike the Iacobucci Inquiry's report, Dark Days tracks the investigations through the eyes of the men who were targeted, and, unlike the Inquiry's report, weaves the stories together in a timeline that exposes the full extent of Canadian complicity in torture, and how the public was misled around these cases.
Every copy sold is a little bit of justice done for the men, and a little bit of accountability for the Canadian agencies, officials and political leaders to blame for their ordeals.
It can be purchased on line at www.Amazon.ca, www.Chapters.ca, or www.Octopus.ca.
Please also check with your local library to ensure they have it, and if they don't, encourage them to order it.
The book has received good reviews in the Globe, Toronto Star and Canwest, and here's what Cameron Ward wrote about it for the Georgian Straight: "Writing in a compelling, fast-paced dramatic style, Pither exposes the ineptitude, if not the outright malevolence, of other Canadian officials who not only turned a blind eye to the plight of the four Canadians as they rotted in jail, but actually relayed interrogation questions to their Syrian torturers. The Syrians apparently felt they were doing
Kerry has a blog where you can read more about the book and link to bookstores, at www.kerrypither.com.
