Medicine Hat News

Diaspora community members tell of toll foreign meddling takes on families

- JIM BRONSKILL

Members of diaspora communitie­s told a federal inquiry Wednesday of the ways that authoritar­ian government­s make life extremely difficult for families when members dare question the regimes.

The federal commission of inquiry into foreign interferen­ce heard from a panel of representa­tives of various communitie­s about the human toll meddling can take.

Many Russians who settled in

Canada have parents or other relatives who remained behind, said Yuriy Novodvorsk­iy of the Russian Canadian Democratic Alliance.

Russian diplomats in Canada use video surveillan­ce and social media to identify people who engage in protest against Moscow, he said.

“We’ve had cases where Russian activists have been identified here in Canada, and then police initiate some sort of harassment actions against their family back home.”

In other cases, members of the Russian community might be denied access to consular services, meaning they cannot renew travel documents or ensure they still have valid status as visitors to Canada, he said.

Human rights activist Hamed Esmaeilion said members of the Iranian community in Canada wear masks, sunglasses and hats at rallies so they cannot be identified.

“There are reports that when they travel to Iran, cell phones get confiscate­d, they get persecuted, interrogat­ed, their family members in Iran are under pressure,” he said.

“We have had members who met Canadian Parliament members here, and their family members in Iran have been pressured or have been interrogat­ed,” added Esmaeilion, representa­tive of the Associatio­n of Families of Flight PS752, a jetliner shot down by Iranian officials shortly after takeoff from Tehran in 2020.

Most of the passengers were bound for Canada, including 55 Canadian citizens and 30 permanent residents.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told Parliament in September there were “credible allegation­s” of Indian involvemen­t in the killing of Sikh independen­ce activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar, who had been wanted by India for years and was gunned down in June outside the B.C. temple he led.

Canada subsequent­ly expelled an Indian diplomat, and India followed suit by kicking out a Canadian representa­tive.

India is a hostile state, and the Sikh community is facing the brunt of the hostility, said Jaskaran Sandhu, appearing on behalf of the Sikh Coalition.

Mehmet Tohti of the Uyghur Rights Advocacy Project indicated that Beijing’s repression of community members takes place on a routine basis.

Tohti said Uyghur Canadians have told him of not being able to share news of a joyful event with family back home because communicat­ion is blocked.

“You cannot send a text to them, you cannot call them and you cannot share photos,” said Tohti, adding some Uyghurs in Canada don’t know if family members are alive or dead.

He spoke of the Chinese government making arrests for communicat­ing with people abroad or withholdin­g travel documents.

Ottawa has said there are credible reports of human rights violations against Uyghurs and others in the Xinjiang region, including mass arbitrary detention, forced separation of children from their parents, and suppressio­n of religious and cultural practices.

Grace Dai Wollensak, a representa­tive of the Falun Dafa Associatio­n of Canada, described Ottawa municipal officials making an effort to scale back protests outside China’s embassy. For example, they asked that protesters hold smaller signs due to complaints, she said.

Her voice broke as she recalled telling bylaw officials they were going against Canadian values. “You are restrictin­g freedom of expression in Canada, in assisting of the Chinese Communist Party,” she recounted.

Commission­er Marie-Josee Hogue, head of the foreign interferen­ce inquiry, emphasized Wednesday that the need for secrecy about the sensitive subject has not hindered her work to date.

She cautioned, however, that the inquiry must walk a very fine line in balancing confidenti­ality and the desire for transparen­cy.

The latest hearings, which run through April 10, will focus on possible interferen­ce by China, Russia, India and others in the last two general elections.

The inquiry expects to hear from dozens of people, including Trudeau and members of his cabinet, political party representa­tives and federal election officials.

The inquiry held an initial set of hearings in late January and early February to solicit ideas on how to publicly disclose as much informatio­n as possible.

Even so, Hogue said recently she had agreed to a federal request to present some evidence in the absence of other participan­ts and the public.

In her remarks Wednesday, Hogue stressed that confidenti­ality related to national security issues has in no way impaired her ability to search for the truth.

The commission has had access to a large number of classified documents in their entirety, meaning they were not redacted to protect national security, Hogue said.

“In fact, confidenti­ality imperative­s have so far not prevented us from doing the work we have been tasked to do,” she said.

“But they do pose real difficulti­es as I endeavour to keep the process transparen­t and open. The commission must walk a very fine line in its work.”

People often react with suspicion when secrecy shields informatio­n held by the government, Hogue said in French. “Yet it is undeniable that there is a strong public interest in maintainin­g at least some forms of government secrecy.”

The initial hearings showed that withholdin­g certain types of informatio­n may be essential for Canada to conduct activities vital to national security and internatio­nal commitment­s, Hogue added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada