Gulf News

Canadian MPs defy outrage to give spies more powers

MOVE IS A RESPONSE TO THE FIRST TERROR ATTACKS ON CANADIAN SOIL LAST OCTOBER

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Lawmakers passed a bitterly opposed anti-terror law on Wednesday dramatical­ly expanding the powers and reach of Canada’s spy agency, allowing it to operate overseas for the first time.

The move came in response to the first terror attacks on Canadian soil last October, when a gunman killed a ceremonial guard and stormed parliament, and a soldier was run over in rural Quebec.

A large number of critics — including celebrated author Margaret Atwood — have vehemently decried bill C-51 as an unpreceden­ted assault on civil rights, saying it lacks oversight and is overly broad.

It criminalis­es the promotion of terrorism, makes it easier for police to arrest and detain individual­s without charge and expands the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service’s (CSIS) mandate from intelligen­ce-collection to actively thwarting terror plots and spying outside Canada.

Daesh threat

Ottawa said the new measures are also needed to stem a tide of young Canadian men and women travelling abroad to join the Daesh extremist group.

At least six Canadians have died over the last two years fighting alongside extremists in Syria and Iraq.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Tory majority in the House of Commons assured its passage, in a 183 to 96 vote, after several failed opposition attempts to water it down.

It will now likely be granted royal ascent in June.

However, widespread anger over the changes may linger to harm the Conservati­ves’ re-election hopes in the fall.

A recent Forum Research poll showed more than half of Canadians are opposed to the enhanced national security measures, while only one-third endorse them.

The act marks the biggest overhaul of Canada’s anti-terrorism legislatio­n since 2001, when Ottawa rushed through new national security measures following attacks in the United States.

Harper’s government held the measure up as necessary to better uncover and rout terrorist plots.

“We need to make sure that the jihadi internatio­nal terrorists who are threatenin­g us are prevented from acting by filling the gap of our informatio­n sharing,” Public Safety Minister Stephen Blaney said in parliament.

But opposition to the bill has been enormous, and fierce.

Criticism

Four former prime ministers and top judges have led the criticism, joined by aboriginal chiefs and environmen­talists who fear being targeted by police in the crackdown.

As part of its new mandate, CSIS could intercept financial transactio­ns, prevent a suspect from boarding a plane, intercept weapons or conduct “online counter-messaging,” for example, by hacking a Twitter account used to recruit jihadists.

The government insists the new measures target “terrorists” and not law-abiding citizens.

But the opposition New Democratic Party said the law is “vague, dangerous and won’t make Canadians safer.”

“Thousands of Canadians took to the streets to protest this bill which will erode our rights and freedoms,” NDP MP Randall Garrison said.

“These people don’t want fear to triumph over the values that guide our democracy.”

Canada’s Privacy Commission­er Daniel Therrien also declared the scope of the new powers “excessive” and the safeguards it lays out against privacy breaches “seriously deficient.”

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