The United States has been listed as a country where prisoners are at risk of torture in a training document produced by the Canadian foreign ministry.
It also classifies some US interrogation techniques as torture.
The manual - part of a training course on torture awareness for diplomats - also includes Israel, China, Iran and Afghanistan on its watch list.
A government spokesman said the manual did not reflect the views of Canada, which is an ally of the US and Israel.
"The training manual is not a policy document and does not reflect the views or policies of this government," said a spokesman for Foreign Minister Maxime Bernier.
The manual lists US interrogation techniques such as forced nudity, isolation, sleep deprivation and the blindfolding of prisoners under "definition of torture".
It also refers to the US detention camp at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba where a Canadian man is being held. Critics say it ridicules Ottawa's claims that Omar Khadr is not being mistreated.
There was no immediate response from either the US or Israel.
Exonerated
The document was provided to Amnesty International as part of a court case it is bringing against the Canadian government over the treatment of detainees in Afghanistan.
Canada has come under growing criticism following allegations that detainees were tortured in Afghanistan after its soldiers transferred suspects to Afghan security forces.
Amnesty is calling for stopping all transfers of prisoners to the Afghan authorities.
The torture awareness course was introduced after Ottawa was strongly criticised for its handling of the case of a Canadian who was deported from the US to Syria in 2002.
Syrian-born Maher Arar - who was accused of being an al-Qaeda member - says he was tortured during his 10 months in a Damascus jail - a claim strongly denied by Syria.
A Canadian government inquiry exonerated Mr Arar of any links with terrorist groups. It also showed that Canadian diplomats had not had any formal training on how to detect whether detainees had been abused.
Source: BBC
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
Maxwell Hanson seeks apology and compensation from Anim Addo over defamation claims
2 minutes -
We listen, we don’t judge: What they don’t tell you about being an entrepreneur
25 minutes -
Mahama orders Lands Commission to halt sale of State Lands
2 hours -
Chiesa on target as Liverpool ease past Accrington Stanley
2 hours -
Everton appoint Moyes as manager for second time
2 hours -
WACCE describes 2024 elections as one of the violent, deadliest in the 4th Republic
2 hours -
Volta Region movie industry stagnated, needs investors to push – stakeholders
2 hours -
Petition against Chief Justice reflects broader public concerns about Judiciary – Joyce Bawa
2 hours -
Northern Ghana won’t experience fuel shortage – NPA assures
2 hours -
Calm restored in Ejura after mob attack on Police Station
2 hours -
18-year-old herdsman remanded over murder of younger brother
2 hours -
GSTEP 2025 Challenge: Organisers seek to support gov’t efforts to tackle youth unemployment
4 hours -
Apaak assures of efforts to avert SHS food shortages as gov’t engages CHASS, ministry on Monday
5 hours -
Invasion of state institutions: A result of mistrust in Akufo-Addo’s gov’t ?
5 hours -
Navigating Narratives: The divergent paths of Western and Ghanaian media
5 hours