After the jump, the complete transcript of Richard Colvin's testimony to the Commons Speical Committee on the Canadian Mission in Afghanistan. This is the unofficial, unedited, untranslated text, in the language spoken.

CANADA

Special Committee on the Canadian Mission in Afghanistan

Comité spécial sur la mission canadienne en Afghanistan

EVIDENCE number 15, Témoignages du comité numéro 15

UNEDITED COPY - COPIE NON ÉDITÉE

Wednesday, November 18, 2009 - Le mercredi 18 novembre 2009

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— Kady O'Malley live blogs the NDP response to the Colvin torture testimony and the Conservative's bucket defence. [Note to CBC: Horrible interface.] Moneyquote: [NDP MP Paul] Dewar...

Unlike Britain and the Netherlands, Canada did not directly monitor how Afghan security forces treated detainees we turned over to them. We relied on the International Red Cross and the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC) to do that. But as Richard Colvin testified, AIHRC was not allowed into the prisons at Kandahar, and Canada's military brass devised a baffling six-step process for notifying the Red Cross in Kandahar when it turned over a prisoner (Military police to Canadian command at Kandahar Airport to CEFCOM in Ottawa to Canadian Embassy in Geneva to Red Cross International Headquarters to Red Cross unit...

In The Coast, Steve Kimber interviews retired Halifax homicide detective Tom Martin on the reasons behind the dismal record closing murder cases in HRM, where 48 killings remain unsolved since 1955. Martin blames the department's top brass Martin pins much of the blame for that on his former department’s senior managers who, he says, lack the training and experience to effectively manage major criminal investigations. The department’s own website, in fact, touts [Chief] Frank Beazley’s most significant career accomplishment prior to becoming chief in 2003 as serving for six years as officer in charge of human resources and training. His deputy, [Chris]...

Mike Targett writes: [A] "bucket defence" might be more familiar to some of your readers as Freud's "kettle logic." However, for Freud, the defence is used when the denier has difficulty accepting the truth, not simply difficulty admitting it. It's plain to see that for the Harper government, the truth was merely inconvenient. When you think of it, "detracting from the narrative" has a sort of "the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy" ring to it, doesn't it? So "bucket defence" is in fact better: the Harper government is not neurotic, but callous and even cruel. Unforgivable. (If we...

Audio file of Colvin's testimony is a must listen, especially the first 20 minutes. CBC - Kady O'Malley's liveblog of the hearing. Moneyquote: I've got to say this testimony really is pretty damning, particularly given the credibility of this witness. He also seems utterly unafraid of any repercussions, and seems to be holding nothing back, including his efforts to alert highers up about his concerns. Canadian Press (Murray Brewster) - the more recent CP filing, at 4:46 this morning. Brewster has consistently done a good job on this story. Toronto Star - "Canada shamed on torture." CBC  (James Cudmore) -  "Handling of Afghan prisoners covered...

Unfortunately, the officials House of Commons recording of Richard Colvin's testimony is not in an audio format I know how to embed. Readers can listen to by clicking here [Link Fixed]. I have transcribed some excerpts below, but everyone should listen to the whole recording. Colvin describes shameful behaviour on the part of senior Canadian military officials and their civilian overseers. The acts and omissions he describes are a disgrace to Canada that must be corrected. The first step in correcting them is for Canadians to fully appreciate what took place. Colvin explained that Canada did not monitor detainees after it turned...

As of 10:25 p.m., CPAC is rebroadcasting Richard Colvin's testimony before the Commons Committee on Afghan Detainees online here....

CBC's Susan Ormiston encountered Richard Colvin when she was a war correspondent, and he was a senior Canadian political officer, in Kandahar. Tonight, on the national, she spoke about his credibility. He was the guy that reporters wanted to get a briefing from when they arrived in Kandahar to find out what was happening on the ground....

Alex Neve, secretary general of Amnesty International Canada,offers useful perspective on Colvin's allegation in an interview with CTV....