Calgary Herald

High court clears anti-terror law

- IAN MACLEOD

The Supreme Court has delivered a stinging defeat to Ottawa terrorist Momin Khawaja with a landmark ruling upholding the constituti­onality of Canada’s anti-terrorism law and his life sentence behind bars.

In a unanimous decision Friday authored by Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin, the high court firmly rejected Khawaja’s constituti­onal challenge of his 2008 conviction for plotting with a group of British Islamist extremists that was planning a 2004 London bombing campaign and to wage a wider jihad against the West.

The high court decision ends the 33-year-old’s hope for salvation from a bleak supermax prison north of Montreal.

Moreover, it gives Canada’s contentiou­s post-9/11 anti-terror law a final passing grade and an acknowledg­ment that the most massive, controvers­ial and complex legislatio­n ever enacted in Canada is true to the aspiration­s of the society it is supposed to protect.

The Supreme Court’s decision implies that in the rush to legislate in the face of a great catastroph­e, the government did not go too far in drafting the Anti-terrorism Act amendments to the Criminal Code. It got it right, or as right as pos- sible, the decision suggests.

And presumably, that has made us all safer.

“What the Supreme Court has done is given confidence to the notion that the Anti-terrorism Act was in some of its core provisions carefully and appropriat­ely constructe­d,” said Wesley Wark, a national security expert and a visiting professor at the Graduate School of Public and Internatio­nal Affairs at the University of Ottawa.

“People were undoubtedl­y right to suspect that there might be things amiss with the legislatio­n but now it’s been challenged in court and it’s been challenged in appeals to the supreme court and now we can take a retrospect­ive breath and say we’ve got a workable law, which is what we need.”

A key issue in Khawaja’s appeal was whether a crucial section of the anti-terror law violates the constituti­onal right to freedom of expression. The so-called “motive clause” requires authoritie­s to prove an individual’s alleged terrorist actions were motivated by religious, ideologica­l or political beliefs.

Khawaja’s legal team argued the clause produces a “chilling” effect on the expression of beliefs and opinions and thus violates the Charter guarantee to freedom of expression.

The crucial question before the court was how much Charter protection should be given to expression­s of violence and whether such conduct can be criminaliz­ed.

In Friday’s decision, it upheld the motive clause and concluded that threats of violence are not constituti­onally protected, which is consistent with its jurisprude­nce.

“Threats of violence, like violence, undermine the rule of law,” the court wrote. “Threats of violence take away free choice and undermine freedom of action. They undermine the very values and social conditions that are necessary for the continued existence of freedom of expression.”

Speaking with reporters later, Khawaja’s dejected lawyer Lawrence Greenspon called it a “terrible day for Momin Khawaja (and) a very unfortunat­e ruling for minorities in this country.”

The court also rejected Khawaja’s claim that one of the Criminal Code’s definition­s of terrorist offences is overly broad and therefore violates the constituti­onal right to life, liberty and security and criminaliz­es innocent activities.

The section, 83.18, makes it a crime to knowingly participat­e in or contribute to, directly or indirectly, any activity of a terrorist group for the purpose of enhancing the ability of a terrorist group to facilitate or carry out a terrorist activity.

Khawaja, along with appellants in two other terrorism case appeals that the court ruled on Friday, argued 83.18 is overly broad because it captures conduct that does not contribute materially to the creation of a risk of terrorism, such as direct and indirect participat­ion in legitimate, innocent and charitable activities carried out by a terrorist group.

The court disagreed, saying a proper interpreta­tion of the sections “exempt(s) those who may unwittingl­y assist terrorists or who do so for a valid reason. Social and profession­al contact with terrorists — for example, such as occurs in normal interactio­ns with friends and family members — will not, absent the specific intent to enhance the abilities of a terrorist group, permit a conviction.”

Greenspan said his concern is not that courts will misinterpr­et how to apply anti-terror laws, but that individual­s expressing unpopular opinions and beliefs, or engaging in contentiou­s but legal activities could find themselves wrongly swept up in criminal investigat­ion and prosecutio­n.

The ruling ends Canada’s first major post-9/11 terrorism prosecutio­n that began in March 2004 when Khawaja was arrested by RCMP at the department of Foreign Affairs, where he worked on contract as a computer specialist.

Over eight years, the case wound its way through five levels of the Canadian court system, as defence lawyers and government prosecutor­s tested the legal limits of the nascent act. The glacial process — pre-trial legal skirmishes alone lasted four years — has led to calls for a streamline­d approach to terrorism cases involving sensitive national security informatio­n.

In Khawaja’s case, the criminal trial was in the Superior Court of Ontario. But several federal government attempts to block defence requests for national security informatio­n could only be heard before the Federal Court of Canada, where designated judges have jurisdicti­on over whether such informatio­n can be withheld from accused individual­s and their defence lawyers. The result was numerous delays in the criminal trial as the case bounced between courts.

Work and others have called for Canada to adopt the streamline­d British approach to terrorism prosecutio­ns, where trial judges also have jurisdicti­on to deal with disclosure issues related to national security issues.

The Supreme Court also upheld Khawaja’s life sentence with no chance of parole for 10 years — plus 24 consecutiv­e years — imposed on the former software engineer by the Ontario Court of Appeal in 2010.

 ?? The Canadian Press/files ?? Momin Khawaja, seen here in 2004, has lost a constituti­onal challenge of Canada’s anti-terror law.
The Canadian Press/files Momin Khawaja, seen here in 2004, has lost a constituti­onal challenge of Canada’s anti-terror law.

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