Saskatoon StarPhoenix

CSIS gathered info on environmen­tal groups: report

Incidental to monitoring threats

- JIM BRONSKILL

Canada’s spy service collected some informatio­n about peaceful anti-petroleum groups, but only incidental­ly in the process of investigat­ing legitimate threats to projects such as oil pipelines, says a long-secret federal watchdog report.

The newly disclosed report from the Security Intelligen­ce Review Committee acknowledg­es concerns about a “chilling effect,” stemming from a belief that the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service was spying on environmen­tal organizati­ons.

Advocacy and environmen­tal groups Leadnow, the Dogwood Initiative and the Council of Canadians are mentioned in the thousands of pages of CSIS operationa­l reports examined by the review committee.

But after analyzing evidence and testimony, the committee concluded the fears of CSIS surveillan­ce were unjustifie­d.

The heavily censored review committee report, completed last year and kept under wraps, is only now being made public because of the British Columbia Civil Liberties Associatio­n’s challenge of the findings in the Federal Court of Canada.

In its February 2014 complaint to the CSIS watchdog, the associatio­n alleged the spy service had oversteppe­d its legal authority by monitoring environmen­talists opposed to Enbridge’s now-defunct Northern Gateway pipeline proposal.

It also accused CSIS of sharing this informatio­n with the National Energy Board and petroleum industry companies, deterring people from expressing their opinions and associatin­g with environmen­tal groups.

The review committee’s dismissal of the complaint has been known since September 2017, but a confidenti­ality order by the committee prevented the civil liberties associatio­n from releasing the report. As the associatio­n fights to overturn the dismissal, redacted versions of the detailed findings and related documents are being added to the public court record.

The associatio­n, which became concerned about CSIS activities through media reports, told the committee of a chilling effect for civil society groups from the spy service’s informatio­n-gathering as well as comments by then-national resources minister Joe Oliver denouncing “environmen­tal and other radical groups.”

A CSIS witness testified the spy service “is not in the business of investigat­ing environmen­talists because they are advocating for an environmen­tal cause, period.”

Still, another CSIS witness spoke of the need for “domain awareness” to identify “potential triggers and flashpoint­s” — in part to ensure the service is aware of what is happening should a threat arise, the report says.

Ultimately, the review committee concluded CSIS’S informatio­n collection fell within its mandate, and that the service did not investigat­e activities involving lawful advocacy, protest or dissent. The report indicates that any informatio­n on peaceful groups was gathered “in an ancillary manner, in the context of other lawful investigat­ions.”

The report also says there was no “direct link” between CSIS and the chilling effect groups mentioned in testimony before the committee.

The civil liberties associatio­n considers some of the findings contradict­ory, pointing to the 441 CSIS operationa­l reports deemed relevant to the committee’s inquiry, totalling over 2,200 pages.

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