National Post

O’toole seeking intervener status in battle to shield lab files

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OTTAWA • Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’toole is seeking to intervene in a Federal Court case where the Liberal government is trying to shield documents related to the firing of two scientists from Canada’s highest-security laboratory.

O’toole’s lawyer has filed a letter with the court saying the leader of the official Opposition has a significan­t interest and distinct perspectiv­e on the underlying issues raised by the case.

The Liberal government asked the court last month to affirm a prohibitio­n on disclosure of records concerning the dismissal of Xiangguo Qiu and her husband, Keding Cheng, from Winnipeg’s National Microbiolo­gy Laboratory.

Speaker Anthony Rota has filed a motion to strike the court action, saying the House of Commons has the power to request the “persons, papers and records” it deems necessary for its functions.

O’toole says in a statement he is taking the “necessary steps” to challenge Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in court and end the “coverup” of the Winnipeg lab documents.

Trudeau is expected to ask the Governor General to dissolve Parliament on Sunday, triggering an election campaign, and O’toole says if he becomes prime minister he will release the documents in his first 100 days.

“I will not stand by while Justin Trudeau’s corrupt Liberal government undermines the supremacy of Parliament, and the right of Canadians to know the extent to which the federal government was partnering with scientists associated with the Chinese military,” he says.

The federal government filed the court case in June shortly after Rota reprimande­d Public Health Agency of Canada head Iain Stewart over his repeated refusal to provide the unredacted documents to MPS on the Canada-china relations committee.

Stewart has advised the attorney general in a notice under the Canada Evidence Act that sensitive or potentiall­y injurious informatio­n would be revealed should the documents be given to the committee.

After considerin­g the notice, the attorney general filed a court applicatio­n requesting an order confirming the documents should remain under wraps.

Opposition parties have joined forces to demand the documents in hope that they’ll shed light on why scientists Qiu and Cheng were escorted out of the lab July 2019 and subsequent­ly fired last January.

They also seek documents related to the transfer, overseen by Qiu, of deadly Ebola and Henipah viruses to China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology in March 2019.

The letter from O’toole’s lawyer says if intervener status is granted, O’toole will make submission­s to the court on various issues including the unique scope of parliament­ary privilege and its evolution in the courts.

He will also speak to the role of Parliament in Canada’s constituti­onal structure and its unfettered discretion to call on individual­s and request documents “to conduct the business of the nation,” the letter says.

 ?? MICHEL COMTE / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? The Liberal government does not want records concerning the dismissal of two scientists from Winnipeg’s National Microbiolo­gy Laboratory turned over to MPS.
MICHEL COMTE / AFP / GETTY IMAGES The Liberal government does not want records concerning the dismissal of two scientists from Winnipeg’s National Microbiolo­gy Laboratory turned over to MPS.

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