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    Canadian jailed in Mexico claims 'abuse and torture'

    A Canadian woman jailed in Mexico on suspicion of leading a conspiracy to smuggle members of slain Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi's family into the country says she has been tortured and abused during nearly three months in custody.

    In a six-page letter obtained by CBC News, Cyndy Vanier documents a string of alleged abuses she claims she has endured since Nov. 10 while being detained in Mexico City's Centro de Arraigos detention centre.

    A Mexican judge Tuesday night ordered Vanier and three co-accused remain in jail for up to 10 more days while authorities decide whether they should be charged. The group has already been held for more than 80 days under Mexico’s "preventive arrest" laws while authorities investigate what they have called an international plot to forge travel documents and smuggle surviving members of the Gadhafi family to a home on Mexico’s Pacific coast.

    Interior Minister Alejandro Poire accused Vanier in December of being the ringleader of the alleged plot. The other accused are:

    Gabriela Davila Huerta, a Mexican living in the United States, accused of plotting to obtain bogus travel documents.

    Pierre Christian Flensborg, of Denmark, accused of planning logistics.

    Jose Luis Kennedy Prieto, a Mexican, accused of obtaining bogus documentation.

    Vanier, a mediator from Mount Forest, Ont., sat down in January with a Mexican human-rights monitor and on a Spanish-alphabet computer keyboard drafted a list of abuses she claims she’s endured, including some that have been verified by Canada’s Department of Foreign Affairs.

    In the document obtained by CBC News, Vanier recounts how she and her husband travelled to Mexico in the fall to begin a six-month winter vacation at a condo she owns in Bucerias. Last July, she travelled to Libya on a fact-finding mission for SNC-Lavalin, the huge Montreal-based engineering firm.

    Vanier says she travelled to Mexico City in early November for business meetings to introduce a client — CBC News has confirmed it was a representative from SNC-Lavalin — to contacts in Mexico about potential water-purification projects.

    While driving up to the St. Regis Hotel in Mexico City, Vanier writes, she was surrounded by 12 men and women in suits demanding to know whether her name was “Cynthia MacDonald” [her maiden name].

    "I was confused and scared. My friend Gabby [co-accused Gabriela Davila Huerta] asked them what this was about as I do not speak Spanish,” Vanier writes in the letter. “I thought I was being kidnapped. They demanded that I go with them to the police station for questioning."

    Vanier claims she was held for hours without even a bathroom break, and denied a chance to call a lawyer or the Canadian Embassy.

    "They kept me there for several hours … and started asking me questions about my work, my trip to Libya in July and who I was and accused me of being a terrorist … I was shocked and scared …and again asked to make a call home."

    Hours later, Vanier writes, she spotted her friend Gabby while being transported to jail.

    "I tried to yell out the open window … and as I did, one of the female officers struck me with her elbow on the lower right side over the kidney. I could hardly breathe, it hurt so much … I started to cry … and they laughed at me.

    "I was in a lot of pain, and when they finally let me use the washroom, I was bleeding when I urinated … I knew this was due to the elbow … my back hurt, and I felt the swelling over my kidney … I tried to tell the doctor at the Camerones that I was in trouble with the kidney … they ignored me and just put me into the cell … I thought I was going to die in there."

    Vanier’s complaint has been delivered to jail officials and prosecutors as well as Canadian Embassy officials in Mexico City and Ottawa. It lays out nine alleged breaches of international conventions on human rights, including claims she was denied access to a lawyer, access to the Canadian Embassy, incarcerated without proof, denied adequate medical treatment and subjected to "physical abuse and torture."

    Foreign affairs officials in Ottawa acknowledge they’ve received Vanier’s letter. John Babcock, spokesman for the minister of state of foreign affairs, told CBC News that Canada is aware of Vanier’s allegations and has raised her health concerns with Mexican officials.

    Babcock also acknowledged it took Mexican officials five days to notify Canada after they arrested Vanier.

    "This is an ongoing investigation and Ms. Vanier faces very serious allegations, which are the equivalent of charges in Mexico: specifically, falsification of documents, human trafficking and participating in organized crime," Babcock wrote in an email.

    "Canadian officials are providing her with consular assistance and consular information has been provided to Ms. Vanier’s husband, whom she has authorized to receive personal information. However, Canadians travelling abroad are subject to the laws in the countries they visit."

    Her parents say they’ve known about their daughter’s complaints for weeks and have kept details of them secret for fear it would jeopardize her treatment by prosecutors and the judicial system.

    "That’s why we’ve been so upset," her mother, Betty MacDonald, told CBC News, "because we’ve been aware of that for a while and unable to talk about it publicly for fear there was even more physical abuse. But now that she’s moving on [to a new prison for up to10 days], the gloves are off. We just need to get whatever help we can get from wherever we can get it."

    Cyndy's father, John MacDonald, said Ottawa should be publicly denouncing Mexico for his daughter’s treatment, given consular officials are kept closely informed.

    "I want to be very careful," he said. "I don’t know if it was an accident, if it was deliberate. But at least she was injured, she was hurt. And as she said in her statement there she was actually peeing blood at one point and getting no attention until that happened. I mean these are serious things and no one should have to go through this."

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    20 comments

    • olderandwiser  •  3 months ago
      It's Mexico, for god's sake! Why is this even news??? Would she rather have been detained in one of her old friend Gadhafi's prisons?
    • Jan  •  Honolulu, United States  •  3 months ago
      WHY IS IT A COUPLE WEEKS AGO HER PARENTS TOLD THE NEWS THEY WERE SURPRISED AT HOW WELL SHE LOOKED AND WAS BEING TREATED, WHEN THEY VISITED HER AT THE MEXICAN JAIL!!!!!!!!!
    • Lloyd  •  San Juan De Dios, Mexico  •  3 months ago
      As mentioned by the Canadian Consular official, "Cadians travelling abroad are subject to the laws of the countries they visit." Well spoken. What are they whining about? As a Canadian living in Mexico I do not make a habit of being investigated for "Very serious criminal activity'. Nice to know that if I do the Canadian embassy will treat me as well as they are treating her without interfering in the affairs of another country as she is alleged to have done.
    • Harperisafraud!  •  Abbotsford, British Columbia  •  3 months ago
      You got caught suck it up. Hope the broom being inserted feels good... was it worth it.
    • falsep  •  Burnaby, British Columbia  •  3 months ago
      Mexico is a war zone-plain & simple. Surf the net and discover what's kept out of the MSM.I havent heard of atrocities (in Mexico) since the Bosnian war.....The latest one is "15 yr old boy found dead, naked in car trunk with face skinned off" . She was CRAZY to go there!
    • Mac confuser  •  3 months ago
      no hugs and kisses?....so sad too bad.
    • Thom  •  Kitchener, Ontario  •  3 months ago
      She should be happy she is in a Mexican jail instead of the jails run by her Ghaddafi buddies.
    • olderandwiser  •  3 months ago
      For those who are still asking "What did she do that was so wrong?" ...via the National Post: The charges range from attempted human trafficking and organized crime to falsification of documents. At the news conference, the suspects were identified as Canadian Cynthia Vanier, two Mexicans and a Danish nightclub owner who lives in Texas.
    • The ANTI-SUPERHERO  •  3 months ago
      Ah, if only her family and friends had offered the right amount of money to the right people...this naughty woman would be free as a bird right now. And for those who talk about the laws of Mexico...WHAT LAWS? In Mexico, I can walk up to you, shoot you in the face and then....before it goes to court...PAY OFF EVERYBODY...and I am a free man. THAT IS THE LAW OF MEXICO. MONEY AND POWER. And for you people who think different....the next time you break a driving law, offer a CANADIAN POLICE OFFICER A BRIBE..and see what happens to you. As for the Mexican police....a bribe is expected and happily accepted by these greasy pigs. Mexican police, judges, lawyers....whatever...GREASE them and you can do whatever you want..BEFORE it goes to court...if things go to court...THEN IT GETS EXPENSIVE!!!
    • Bog  •  Toronto, Ontario  •  3 months ago
      I wonder if the Gadhafi clan would have gotten the same kind of 5 star treatment many canadians get when they go down to Mexico.
    • Canada First  •  3 months ago
      Stupid cow. When you break the law in a third world country, you should expect the worst. After all these years of murder and civil war, she seems surprised. Then these idiots expect the Canadian government to bail them out.

      If you are that stupid, you deserve what you get.
      • FACT! 3 months ago
        And what law was that???
      • Ryan 3 months ago
        and what law did she break? Being a consultant for a engineering firm that makes water purification systems?
      • olderandwiser 3 months ago
        @FACT and Ryan... the crimes with which they have been charged are a matter of public record. Read the papers.
    • Salpot  •  3 months ago
      Mexico is a cesspool of corruption.
    • AnTi-CoRp  •  Vancouver, British Columbia  •  3 months ago
      but you are mexican now babes, you have a condo and live there!!!! you help muslim terrorist leaders to escape after they torture their people, you have NO humanity in you it appears, why whine to us.. when in mexico there witch!!! hope you cant get out ever.
      • FACT! 3 months ago
        She was on a confirmed business meeting. I'll just assume you can't read.
    • AnTi-CoRp  •  Vancouver, British Columbia  •  3 months ago
      well, you wanted to eat diarhea with melted cheese on unleaven bread and live amongst the poor as a rich cow,,, bye bye now.
    • licketysplit  •  3 months ago
      I agree. Why do people insist on going to Mexico? they treat Canadians like dirt.
    • FACT!  •  Burlington, Ontario  •  3 months ago
      Why does anyone go to rat infested Mexico??? I guess they have a death wish.
    • Carl  •  Vancouver, British Columbia  •  3 months ago
      Canada won't do anything as per standard policy. Weak Canadians.
      • Canada First 3 months ago
        Yo, Carl, you keep smoking that dope. When you are in a third world country and break the law, you shouldn't expect your country to bail you out just because you got caught. Do the crime, do the time.

        I suppose you expect that maybe she should get house arrest in a luxury hotel/???? Possibly we should have put Robert Picton up in the Vancouver Delta?
      • FACT! 3 months ago
        What crime did she commit GovCor???

        No Carl, it isn't weak Canadians, it's the douchebag party we have in power.
    • KEN  •  Toronto, Ontario  •  3 months ago
      Next thing she will want her welfare check sent to Mexico.If you want to get involved in shady actions in another country why re you crying to Canada now.
      • FACT! 3 months ago
        Oh, you mean doing her job for SNC Lavelin is a shady action??? Wow, are you ever stupid. I bet you'd rather have her welfare cheque sent to your home when they send your welfare cheque. I understand now.
    • steve c  •  3 months ago
      play in the devils backyard and sucks to be you
    • Carl  •  Toronto, Ontario  •  3 months ago
      Mexico, the place we all know not to go. Sounds like the Mexican police were trained by the Ottawa Police (self) Service. Torture, beating, threats, confinement without a charge, etc., yup sounds just like the OPSS.
      • Thom 3 months ago
        Hey Carl, The OPS is a good force, perhaps you should give a rat's #$%$ about those Toronto boys instead of worrying about another city.
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