The Peterborough Examiner

‘Racist’ doc sends up ‘red flag’ over RCMP

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA — The emergence of an RCMP questionna­ire targeting Muslim asylum seekers in Quebec prompted fresh accusation­s Thursday that the Liberal government mismanaged this past summer’s massive flow of migrants from the U.S.

The questionna­ire was used at the Quebec border crossing that saw an influx of thousands of asylum seekers from the U.S., many of them of Haitian descent who were concerned about the Trump administra­tion’s decision to cancel a program that allowed them to stay in the country.

Among other things, the questionna­ire asked opinions about religious practice, head coverings associated with Muslim women and terrorist groups with mainly Muslim members.

Toronto immigratio­n lawyer Clifford McCarten said he obtained a copy of the document from a client seeking refugee status, who had been given the three-page, 41-question document by mistake.

“He was shocked by the questions,” said McCarten, who provided a copy to The Canadian Press.

The man was originally from a Muslim country, he added.

“Canada is a very liberal country that believes in freedom of religious practice and equality between men and women. What is your opinion of this subject? How would you feel if your boss was a woman? How do you feel about women who do not wear the hijab?” says the questionna­ire, which also asked the same question about other head and body coverings, including the dupatta, niqab, chador and burka.

A spokesman for Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said the government found out on Tuesday about the existence of the questionna­ire from a “stakeholde­r” who takes an interest in the work of the department.

Public Safety spokesman Scott Bardsley said the department was immediatel­y concerned and the document is no longer being used by the RCMP.

“Some of the questions were inappropri­ate and inconsiste­nt with government policy,” Bardsley said in an e-mailed statement.

Bardsley said the document was only used “locally,” but would not say whether there would be repercussi­ons for any of the Mounties involved in its creation.

He referred those questions to the RCMP, but a spokeswoma­n said Thursday the Mounties would not be granting interviews on the topic. In a written statement, the RCMP said the “interview guide” was used by its Quebec C Division and “has been revised to better evaluate individual­s coming into the country whose origin is unknown, while being respectful of their situations.”

McCarten said the existence of the document raises questions about the federal government’s competence in managing the sudden surge of arrivals from the U.S.

“If, in fact, this was a local detachment making this decision — which I find a bit hard to believe — then it’s deeply concerning that one of the most, if not the most problemati­c crisis spot in Canadian immigratio­n and refugee policy right now ... doesn’t have a federal strategy for how screening is happening.”

Matthew Dube, the NDP public safety critic, said in an interview the questionna­ire raises “red flags” about whether the RCMP is engaged in widespread racial profiling, and he called on Goodale to launch a broad inquiry to find out.

He said he has serious concerns that Goodale didn’t know about the questionna­ire until Tuesday.

“I have no idea how such a racist, profiling questionna­ire could ever be part of an operationa­l procedure.”

Jenny Kwan, the NDP immigratio­n critic, said the government needs to provide more answers on how the questionna­ire was used.

“The number of times someone prays should have no bearing on their refugee status. That is not who we are,” she said.

Other questions asked the applicants to specify their religion and “how often” they practise their religion.

McCarten said the RCMP needs to conduct security screening, but the questions being asked don’t cover all potential threats to Canada.

“It appears to instruct RCMP officers to be asking questions to the exclusion of other types of concerns, specifical­ly the right-wing, white supremacis­t violence happening in the U.S. and that we have a history of in Canada,” he said.

“It asks questions that are discrimina­tory, that reflect a kind of institutio­nal bias and an institutio­nal ignorance of the RCMP of the nature of risk.”

He said asking a Muslim their opinion of head coverings is “absurd” and akin to “asking a Jewish person what their opinions are about men who don’t wear the yarmulke.”

 ?? CHARLES KRUPA/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? An RCMP officer standing in Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle, Que., on Aug. 7, advises migrants that they are about to illegally cross from Champlain, N.Y., and will be arrested. A spokesman for Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says an RCMP questionna­ire...
CHARLES KRUPA/THE CANADIAN PRESS An RCMP officer standing in Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle, Que., on Aug. 7, advises migrants that they are about to illegally cross from Champlain, N.Y., and will be arrested. A spokesman for Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says an RCMP questionna­ire...

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