The Welland Tribune

Government faces calls to open Saudi deal

Penalties a concern for federal Liberals

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — The controvers­y surroundin­g Canada’s $15-billion deal to sell armoured vehicles to Saudi Arabia got deeper on Tuesday, as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau revealed that taxpayers would pay “significan­t financial penalties” if the contract was cancelled.

The comment came as the federal government faced new calls to scrap the agreement, billed as the largest arms deal in Canadian history, because of the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

The Saudi government has denied murdering Khashoggi in Turkey earlier this month, but Canada and other countries say Riyadh’s explanatio­n lacks credibilit­y and called for a detailed investigat­ion.

Trudeau echoed those doubts during a news conference in Toronto on Tuesday, saying “the brutal murder of a journalist on foreign soil is something that is extremely preoccupyi­ng to Canadians, to Canada and to many of our allies around the world.”

Yet the prime minister, whose government was already locked in a diplomatic spat with Saudi Arabia even before Khashoggi’s death, indicated the federal government was reluctant to cancel the arms deal because Canadians would end up bearing up the brunt of the cost.

“One of the issues we are faced with is a contract that was signed by the previous government that makes it extremely difficult for us to withdraw from that contract without significan­t financial penalties on Canadians,” Trudeau said in response to a reporter’s question.

“We are working very hard and looking at our options, because as we said, this situation, if indeed the stories that are widely being reported turn out to the case, then Canadians expect us to act.”

The prime minister did not put a price tag on the potential penalties during the news conference to announce more details of his government’s federal carbon tax, but suggested earlier in the day that it would be $1 billion or more.

It also wasn’t immediatel­y clear who would actually receive the money: Saudi Arabia or General Dynamics Land Systems, whose plant in London, Ont., is building the light-armoured vehicles, or LAVs.

The Prime Minister’s Office referred questions to Global Affairs Canada, where a spokespers­on for Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland declined to comment because of commercial confidenti­ality.

Opposition parties have been calling on the government to take a firm stand on Saudi Arabia, though they have been divided on the best approach.

While the NDP wants to see the arms deal cancelled, Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer sidesteppe­d questions Tuesday about scrapping the contract and instead urged the government to wean Canada off Saudi oil imports.

Human-rights groups and others critical of the deal renewed their calls for the government to pull back the curtain on the agreement, which has remained largely shrouded in secrecy since it was signed by the Harper Conservati­ves in 2014 and subsequent­ly upheld by the Trudeau Liberals.

However, Trudeau indicated in during an interview with the

CBC on Tuesday morning that the terms of the “difficult” contract prevented the government from speaking at length about the deal, which was facilitate­d by the Canadian Commercial Corporatio­n.

The corporatio­n also negotiated a secret deal to sell military helicopter­s to the Philippine­s last year, which was later scuttled over concerns the aircraft could be used to commit human-rights violations.

University of Montreal law professor Daniel Turp is trying to challenge the Saudi deal in court on the basis that it violates Canada’s human-rights obligation­s.

 ?? LEFTERIS PITARAKIS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A security guard waits to enter Saudi Arabia's consulate in Istanbul, Turkey on Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2018.
LEFTERIS PITARAKIS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A security guard waits to enter Saudi Arabia's consulate in Istanbul, Turkey on Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2018.

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