Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

The ripple effects of invoking draconian laws must not be ignored

- BY ABDUL NAKUA

Antiterror­ism laws have broadened the powers of government and its agencies. It’s time to examine their necessity and address their abuses.

After six weeks of public hearings, the public inquiry into the use of the Emergencie­s Act came to a close on Nov. 26, 2022, after a marathon of 300 hours of testimony and 9,000 exhibits, and more than 70 witnesses. Announced on April, 25, 2022, the Public Order Emergency Commission, led by Justice Paul Rouleau, was mandated to examine and assess the basis for the government’s decision to declare a public order emergency, and the appropriat­eness and effectiven­ess of the measures selected by the government to deal with the situation. The Emergencie­s Act was designed to balance the maintenanc­e of public order with the protection of civil liberties.

Around the same time but with much less fanfare and public exposure, an obscure inquiry was being conducted by the Senate’s Human Rights Committee, chaired by Senator Salma Ataullahja­n, looking at systemic biases and Islamophob­ia. Despite the obvious difference­s between the two inquiries, there are many threads that connect their relevance for Canadians.

Both examine the extent of damage that can result from the use of government discretion when applying draconian laws such as the Emergencie­s Act or antiterror­ism laws. It is puzzling, however, that antiterror­ism laws have not attracted attention or generated much concern among Canadians despite their intrusion into the civil liberties space.

Since their introducti­on post 9/11, antiterror­ism laws have broadened the executive power of the government with little or no oversight. They have introduced permanent changes to the Criminal Code, the Official Secrets Act, the Privacy Act and the Canada Evidence Act, giving the government and its agencies far-reaching powers in the process. A new Crown corporatio­n, the Canadian Air Transport Security Agency was created in 2002. The Financial Transactio­ns Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (FINTRAC) was given antiterror­ist financial tracking responsibi­lities.

Then in 2015, the Anti-Terrorism Act (Bill C-51) underwent a major overhaul under the Harper government resulting in a massive expansion of state power without oversight or safeguards. More than 100 Canadian law professors warned that this bill was a “dangerous piece of legislatio­n.” There were fears that the changes would erode democratic checks and balances, weaken the establishe­d guarantees of the rule of law and infringe on civil liberties. These fears will only grow with the increased pervasiven­ess of digital technology and growing sensitivit­ies around privacy and surveillan­ce.

But despite these fears and many protestati­ons, the antiterror laws have proven remarkably resistant to amendments or repeal. Various government­s of different political persuasion­s lacked either the will or the aptitude, or both, to change course. The only positive amendment adopted a more robust government oversight framework in 2019. The National Security Intelligen­ce Review Agency was created to review the activities of the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service and the Communicat­ions Security Establishm­ent as well as other national agencies and department­s like the RCMP and the Canadian Border Services Agency.

More than 40 years ago, the Commission of Inquiry Concerning Certain Activities of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (also known as the McDonald Commission) concluded that security and intelligen­ce agencies in Canada must be assessed on both the effectiven­ess as well as the conformity with the requiremen­ts of democracy. It declared that a responsibl­e government must abide by the rule of law and guarantee the freedom of legitimate political dissent. It made clear that these principles must not be compromise­d, whittled down or balanced off for the sake of convenienc­e in applying security measures.

Ironically, the government may have compromise­d the McDonald Commission standard in its pursuit of a risk-avoidance counter-terrorism approach. Despite that, there was no desire by the government nor any sustained pressure by the civic society to examine the necessity of these laws, their effectiven­ess or the potential arbitrarin­ess in their applicatio­n despite the consequenc­es for individual­s, organizati­ons and the country as a whole.

Such an independen­t examinatio­n and impartial assessment of the antiterror­ism laws should be of the same, if not higher, priority than that for the Emergencie­s Act. This is because, unlike the War Measures Act or the Emergencie­s Act, the antiterror­ism laws are permanent rather than emergency legislatio­ns.

Arbitrary arrests, no-fly lists, security certificat­es, citizenshi­p revocation­s, delisting of charitable organizati­ons, increasing surveillan­ce and deteriorat­ing personal privacy along with the blurring of lines between lawful dissent and illegal activities are part of the legacy of those laws.

The impact is etched in the memory of many Canadians whose lives were altered due to these laws. For instance, the Iacobucci and O’Connor inquiries provide an account of the effect of inaccurate intelligen­ce sharing practices by Canadian security agencies. Both inquiries exposed the lack of civilian oversight on our national security.

Some people continue to live in limbo under the system of security certificat­es, which the Supreme Court of Canada ruled unconstitu­tional. Even when updated to meet the constituti­onality test, the court found this regime is more advantageo­us for the state than criminal proceeding­s.

Canadian no-fly lists continue to interfere with mobility rights of many Canadians. While the government has not released the number of people enlisted, the number could be as high as 100,000 entries, according to one estimate. However, more than 850 Canadians have been assigned promise codes to avoid no-fly list false flags as of early 2022.

The effect of antiterror­ism laws goes beyond just individual­s. They are also responsibl­e for shrinking the public sphere through overregula­tion and arbitrary and disproport­ionate targeting of charities. Canadian Muslim charities now face targeted audits from the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA), just as environmen­tal groups did.

Recently, the taxpayers’ ombudspers­on, François Boileau, confirmed that the CRA was obstructin­g his investigat­ion on the grounds of national security. The CRA’s director general of the charities directorat­e, Sharmila Khare, admitted at a Senate committee hearing that the framework used for these audits was not establishe­d nor created at the CRA. She further asserted that “we [CRA] are part of a whole-of-government approach when it comes to national security.”

The denial of access to financial services is also casting a shadow of uncertaint­y over the charitable sector. Debanking (or de-risking) remains a process that lacks transparen­cy, precision and legal recourse even though it can be triggered by unproven or unsubstant­iated allegation­s. FINTRAC has shown no indication of addressing this problem. Meanwhile, its Australian counterpar­t, the Australian Transactio­n Reports and Analysis Centre, completed a consultati­on process to ad

dress the harm from the debanking process and its unintended consequenc­es.

Because of the extraordin­ary powers the antiterror­ism laws afford government­s, they should be subjected to extraordin­ary scrutiny. To date, this scrutiny is almost non-existent. There was no serious or coherent assessment of these laws to determine if they are necessary and proportion­ate, nor any attempt to examine their effectiven­ess against terrorism. Whether they contain appropriat­e safeguards against abuse or are exercised in a way that is evidence-based and proportion­ate is still an open question.

The 2019 New Zealand Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Terrorist Attack on Christchur­ch Mosques might provide a blueprint for such an undertakin­g. This inquiry examined the effectiven­ess of that country’s security agencies and its antiterror­ism laws in addressing security threats facing that nation. Among its conclusion­s was that there was an inappropri­ate concentrat­ion of counterter­rorism resources on the threat of “Islamist extremist terrorism.”

The report concluded this was not based on an informed assessment of the threats associated with other ideologies and it did not come from a system-wide decision of risk analysis. It called for alternativ­e frameworks to address safety and security challenges that were anchored in inclusion and social cohesion.

Justice Rouleau is expected to submit his report on the Emergencie­s Act by early February. The government is expected to table it in the House of Commons and Senate of Canada before February 20, 2023. It is worth rememberin­g that the deliberati­ve measures contained in the Emergencie­s Act were an outcome from the McDonald Commission to address the inherent flaws of the War Measures Act.

Worthy of note also is the fact that the War Measures Act was invoked three times during the 20th century in Canada. Twice to arrest and detain “enemy aliens” during the First World War and the Second World War, and more recently during the October Crisis in Quebec in 1970. Canadians look at these episodes in our history with some shame.

It is time for a similar commission that examines the necessity of the antiterror­ism laws, and assesses their effectiven­ess, and addresses their abuses. The former chief justice of the Supreme Court of Canada Beverley McLachlin in a speech she gave in New Zealand in 2005 spoke of the Justice Rand principle that government­s do not and should not have “absolute and untrammell­ed discretion.” Such a discretion may violate the “norms of fairness” that is the foundation of the rule of law. The antiterror­ism laws are unlikely to meet this standard upon any rigorous cross-examinatio­n. The findings and recommenda­tions of the Rouleau report could reinvigora­te the public concern about government overreach and galvanize support for such an examinatio­n. ■

 ?? (SENATE OF CANADA - SÉNAT DU CANADA/FACEBOOK) ?? Senator Salma Ataullahja­n
(SENATE OF CANADA - SÉNAT DU CANADA/FACEBOOK) Senator Salma Ataullahja­n

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