Cape Breton Post

Foreign cyberthrea­t to Canadian elections increasing: report

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Canada’s electronic spy agency issued a stark warning Friday that online attempts to influence or undermine the country’s electoral process are on the increase — and steps must be taken to counter the efforts.

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland calls it a serious threat to Canadian democracy — one the government, the public and the media alike must join forces to combat.

The new report, released by the Communicat­ions Security Establishm­ent, comes amid questions about Russia’s role in the last U.S. presidenti­al election.

While foreign states did not use cyberattac­ks to try to influence the last federal election in 2015, there are no guarantees they won’t try in 2019, the next time Canadians are scheduled to go to the federal polls, it says.

In response, the Liberal government is promising to set aside political bickering and work with other federal parties to protect the electoral system from foreign adversarie­s and other nefarious actors to deal with “our shared challenge ahead in a very Canadian way,” said Democratic Institutio­ns Minister Karina Gould, the lead minister on the file.

Freeland said she’s taken up the issue actively in various internatio­nal meetings with like-minded allies, but she sidesteppe­d questions about whether she has raised the issue with her Russian counterpar­ts.

“It’s an issue which has been discussed quite energetica­lly at the NATO table and also at the G7 table,” Freeland told a conference call Friday. “It’s probably worth pointing out that it’s an issue we have discussed directly with our Latvian allies, because Canada is leading the battle group in Latvia.”

Canada’s contributi­on to the NATO mission in Latvia is part of the alliance’s plan to bolster Europe’s eastern flank to deter Russia, which annexed part of Ukraine three years ago, and has been blamed for cyberattac­ks in several countries in eastern Europe in recent years.

Among the steps announced Friday is to have the CSE, whose mandate includes protecting the country from cyberthrea­ts, brief all federal parties for the first time on the dangers — and how to protect themselves.

The electronic spy agency will also work with Elections Canada and its provincial counterpar­ts to shore up their own defences.

Freeland said the job of guarding against such interferen­ce is one that extends beyond government.

“It needs to be a cross-party effort. It needs to be a social effort, a public effort. It’s a job the media need to be very much involved in, too,” she said.

“We need to all appreciate that we have a shared interest in standing up for and defending our democracy.”

The CSE report, the first of its kind, looked at the threat posed by cyberactiv­ity not only in Canada, but around the world in recent years.

It found that there has been an upward trend in such activity over the past five years, and that 13 per cent of elections held around the world this year had been targeted.

The nature of the activity runs the gamut, the report says, including efforts to suppress voter turnout, attempts to discredit or blackmail parties and candidates and an overall campaign of disinforma­tion.

Canada has not been immune, said CSE chief Greta Bossenmaie­r, noting that the last federal election saw lowlevel cyberattac­ks that were most likely perpetrate­d by what she called “hacktivist­s” and cybercrimi­nals.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Democratic Institutio­ns Minister Karina Gould and the Chief of the Communicat­ions Security Establishm­ent Greta Bossenmaie­r hold a news conference to discuss an assessment of cyber threats to Canada’s democratic process in Ottawa.
CP PHOTO Democratic Institutio­ns Minister Karina Gould and the Chief of the Communicat­ions Security Establishm­ent Greta Bossenmaie­r hold a news conference to discuss an assessment of cyber threats to Canada’s democratic process in Ottawa.

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