Canadians living abroad are just as much Canadian citizens as Canadians living in Canada. There is only one level of citizenship.
Many Canadians live abroad longterm for a variety of valid reasons and they are no less Canadian citizens than other Canadians. This includes people teaching English or French, doing missionary work, diplomacy or working at Canadian embassies and consulates, international trade, representing Canadian companies with foreign offices abroad and so on.
I'm amazed how easily some Canadians will smear other Canadians with negative propaganda rather than recognize rights taken away from one Canadian citizen affects all Canadians.
The ICRC has an international reputation for being objective and fair. While they have no mandate to enforce, they do have a mandate to investigate abuses and non-compliance without interference. Typically they don't publicize their findings except in extreme cases. They will report their findings privately to other signatory states, so that all signatory states know who is and isn't repecting international law and can act accordingly. Yes they have a quasi-legal status, because states voluntarily sign the applicable treaties and recognize their authority. No state is obligated to recognize the authority of the ICRC unless they sign the applicable treaties.
Many Canadians live abroad longterm for a variety of valid reasons and they are no less Canadian citizens than other Canadians. This includes people teaching English or French, doing missionary work, diplomacy or working at Canadian embassies and consulates, international trade, representing Canadian companies with foreign offices abroad and so on.
I'm amazed how easily some Canadians will smear other Canadians with negative propaganda rather than recognize rights taken away from one Canadian citizen affects all Canadians.
The ICRC has an international reputation for being objective and fair. While they have no mandate to enforce, they do have a mandate to investigate abuses and non-compliance without interference. Typically they don't publicize their findings except in extreme cases. They will report their findings privately to other signatory states, so that all signatory states know who is and isn't repecting international law and can act accordingly. Yes they have a quasi-legal status, because states voluntarily sign the applicable treaties and recognize their authority. No state is obligated to recognize the authority of the ICRC unless they sign the applicable treaties.
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