Last fall, when the Rideau Institute, an Ottawa-based think tank, released its report on Afghan detainees, it was like a blast from the past. How was anyone talking about Afghanistan again? Weren’t all things Afghanistan done and sorted, tied up in a red bow, and labelled “solved”? I was sure I’d been transported back almost a decade to a time when the term “Afghan detainees” was a near constant in both media and political discourse.

The report did a good job of laying out the issue, to jog our collective memory. For a period of almost six years starting in late 2005, Canadian forces in Afghanistan were transferring detainees into the custody of Afghan intelligence, despite knowing the detainees were at serious risk of torture. Media interviews with former detainees soon followed, describing the scope of abuse and torture at the hands of Afghan interrogators. The question for Canada was: what did the government know and when did it know it? The answers, as laid out in the report, seemed to be: quite a bit and early on.

The report renewed a call for an inquiry into the Afghan detainee scandal that first erupted in early 2007 and was never adequately addressed by Stephen Harper’s government, despite several attempts to investigate and determine the facts.

There was a hope that, under leadership from the new Liberal government, the Afghan detainee issue would finally get the fair and open hearing it always deserved. Part of that hope hinged on the fact that when in opposition, the Liberals had made much fuss about greater transparency and accountability. But those hopes were dashed this past May when, in a written statement responding to an e-petition submitted by former NDP MP Craig Scott, Minister of National Defence Harjit Sajjan laid out all the reasons he felt the Afghan detainee issue was resolved and put to rest.

Maybe Sajjan’s certainty that Canada’s conduct was above board stems from knowing things average Canadians don’t know, given his intelligence gathering role while serving in the military in Kandahar. Maybe Canadians are expected to simply take the government at its word. Perhaps transparency and accountability are merely aspirational.

The government’s refusal to hold an inquiry, while disappointing, is not surprising because, frankly, Canada — and Canadians — moved on from Afghanistan long ago. And that’s a shame.

Canada has not had any national reckoning with its role in Afghanistan. There’s been little accounting of what happened, what went wrong, and what, if anything, went right. We know the mission cost at least $18 billion, but that figure doesn’t touch the cost of taking care of veterans or their families. It doesn’t include the long-term cost of Afghan governance and security projects gone awry or left incomplete. And what of the ethical obligations Canada has to Afghanistan and its people?

From the start of Canada’s mission, the government’s attention — and therefore much of the media’s attention — was tightly fixed on Kandahar. Media reporting was almost exclusively focused on troop movements. Reconstruction and development became political talking points with stories mostly taken up as a feel-good backdrop to Canada’s military engagement. How much do we talk now about ghost schools and unusable health facilities, inflated student enrollment numbers and endemic corruption? Of opportunities lost and those never pursued? Not only have the Taliban been back for years, now there are credible concerns about ISIS – its flag having been raised in the north at least twice this past year.

Afghans are fleeing their country in record numbers. Some are leaving out of fear of growing violence, many because they just don’t see any future for themselves. Young people are increasingly seeking higher education but to what end? Their job prospects are slim.

When I first went to report from Afghanistan in 2008, I hired Shafi (not his real name) to work as my translator and fixer. Each time I returned I worked with him and I watched over the years as his views and goals shifted and changed. Shafi had dropped out of university when the Taliban came to Kabul and he’d always wanted to go back and get his degree. In 2012 he finally decided to do it, and he graduated this past May.

I remember back in 2011, Shafi was particularly despondent. He wasn’t sure how he’d come up with the money for tuition. Foreign journalists weren’t coming to Afghanistan as much and work was drying up. He had a family to support. He started talking about looking for a smuggler who could help him get to Europe. He was bent on getting to Germany where he had friends, but a relative was able to help him with tuition and he eventually gave up his plans to leave.

When we talked just after his graduation, he once again spoke about leaving. Shafi had stayed in Afghanistan even when things were at their worst. He never left even to hop over the border to Pakistan to wait out the hard times. But now, he says, the situation is hopeless. He may have a university degree but there are no jobs to be had. Violence is rampant. Corruption is around every corner. He says the government makes big promises but delivers nothing and meanwhile, the rich continue to get richer.