Asian Journal

Trudeau misses deadline for disclosing private interests to ethics commission­er

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Ottawa: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has run afoul of federal ethics rules yet again this time missing the deadline for filing a financial disclosure statement with the ethics commission­er.

Every MP is required to file a disclosure statement within 60 days of his or her election being published in the Canada Gazette; in Trudeau’s case, the deadline was Jan. 13.

Of the 338 MPS elected last October, only 13, including Trudeau, had failed to file their statements as of Feb. 5, the last time commission­er Mario Dion’s office updated a status report on members’ compliance with the disclosure requiremen­t. The Prime Minister’s Office says the failure to file was an administra­tive oversight that is being corrected.

The compliance status report, available on the ethics commission­er’s website, is to be updated again Wednesday.

There is no penalty for missing the deadline for filing the statements, in which MPS are supposed to detail their own and family members’ private interests, as a hedge against winding up in a conflict of interest. Trudeau has twice been found to have violated the

Conflict of Interest Act: by accepting a 2016 family vacation on the private Bahamian

island owned by the Aga Khan, billionair­e spiritual leader of the world’s Ismaili Muslims; and by improperly pressuring his former attorney general, Jody Wilson-raybould, to intervene to stop the criminal prosecutio­n of Montreal engineerin­g giant Snc-lavalin.

Others who had not filed their disclosure statements as of Feb. 5 included Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-francois Blanchet,

Liberal MPS Wayne Easter and Hedy Fry, and Conservati­ve MPS John Barlow and Arnold Viersen.

The Canadian Press

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

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