Edmonton Journal

Feds aim to hide spies’ identities at trial

Government being sued over alleged torture

- Jim Bronskill

OTTAWA • Canada’s spy agency wants to shield the identities of five current and former employees from the public when they testify in the lawsuit of a Montreal man who was detained in Sudan — prompting vehement objections from the man’s lawyer.

In newly filed court documents, federal lawyers say the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service (CSIS) identities must be kept confidenti­al in order to protect the individual­s from personal harm and to ensure the service can continue to work effectivel­y.

It is the latest legal spat in the long-running case of Abousfian Abdelrazik, who is suing the Canadian government for an apology and compensati­on over his lengthy overseas detention.

Abdelrazik, 56, arrived in Canada from Africa as a refugee in 1990. He became a Canadian citizen five years later.

He was arrested during a 2003 visit to Sudan to see family. In custody, Abdelrazik was interrogat­ed by CSIS about suspected extremist links. He claims he was tortured by Sudanese intelligen­ce officials during two periods of detention, though Canada says it knew nothing of the purported abuse.

Abdelrazik denies any involvemen­t in terrorism, and civil proceeding­s against the government are slated to begin Monday in the Federal Court of Canada.

The federal lawyers, backed by an affidavit from a senior CSIS official, are asking the Federal Court for an order that will permit the spy service witnesses to testify in open court while ensuring their names and physical appearance are kept from the public, Abdelrazik and his counsel.

All five employees have “worked in a covert operationa­l capacity” and divulging their identities would put them at risk of personal harm, given the threats that are frequently made against the service and its employees, the federal submission says.

The government proposes the five “protected witnesses” be allowed to enter and leave the courtroom via a special entrance, take an oath in a separate room, and testify while hidden by a screen or through video conference in a manner that obscures their faces.

The witnesses would provide their real names in writing to the judge and the required court staff prior to testifying.

Abdelrazik’s lawyer, Paul Champ, calls the federal request “a gross overreach.”

“In some cases the identity of undercover police officers are protected, but it’s only for a limited period and with evidence of a specific danger or threat. There is none of that here. And why should CSIS get more protection than the police?” Champ said.

“There needs to be accountabi­lity and those responsibl­e should not be allowed to hide in the shadows.”

He plans to file written arguments with the court opposing the confidenti­ality demands later this week. The disagreeme­nt is not expected to delay the trial as the witnesses are not scheduled to appear for several weeks.

The federal submission notes the CSIS Act makes it an offence to name an employee “who was, is or is likely to become engaged in covert operationa­l activities” of the service.

Senior CSIS personnel who appear in public forums are typically identified publicly. Current CSIS director David Vigneault is expected to testify openly at the Abdelrazik trial.

However, federal lawyers contend the five other witnesses in question must be shielded given the threats to intelligen­ce personnel posed by terrorist organizati­ons such as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant and hostile intelligen­ce looking to exploit such opportunit­ies.

They also cite the recent British charges against two alleged Russian intelligen­ce officers in relation to the attempted murder of double agent Sergei Skripal, his daughter and a police officer with a military-grade nerve agent.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Abousfian Abdelrazik is suing the Canadian government for an apology and compensati­on over his lengthy detention in Sudan in 2003.
RYAN REMIORZ / THE CANADIAN PRESS Abousfian Abdelrazik is suing the Canadian government for an apology and compensati­on over his lengthy detention in Sudan in 2003.

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