Times Colonist

MPs grill ‘incompeten­t’ health agency on fired microbiolo­gy scientists

- DYLAN ROBERTSON

OTTAWA — Federal officials in charge of the National Microbiolo­gy Lab defended security protocols at the Winnipeg institutio­n against accusation­s from MPs of bureaucrat­ic incompeten­ce Friday.

“We acted as expeditiou­sly as we could, given the informatio­n that was available,” Public Health Agency of Canada head Heather Jeffrey said Friday.

She testified at the House committee on Canada-China relations as it probes Ottawa’s handling of two researcher­s at the Winnipeg lab who left Canada after their security clearances were revoked over questions about their loyalty and potential coercion by Beijing.

Records tabled in Parliament in February say the scientists, Xiangguo Qiu and her husband, Keding Cheng, played down their collaborat­ions with Chinese government agencies before the agency fired them in 2021.

The documents also show the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service concluded that Qiu repeatedly lied about the extent of her work with institutio­ns of the Chinese government, and that she refused to admit involvemen­t in various Chinese programs even when evidence was presented to her.

The spy service described Qiu as “reckless in her dealings” with various Chinese entities, “particular­ly in her lack of respect for proper scientific protocols regarding the transfer of pathogens and in working with institutio­ns whose goals have potentiall­y lethal military applicatio­ns” contrary to the interests of Canada.

The RCMP are undertakin­g a national-security investigat­ion, though Qiu and Cheng have not been prosecuted for any criminal charge in relation to the allegation­s. Jeffrey says both are Canadian citizens and they have requested a review of Ottawa’s decision to revoke their security clearances.

On Monday, MPs representi­ng the Conservati­ves, Bloc Québécois and even a Liberal grilled officials over why Qiu was allowed to undertake sensitive work while she and Cheng were under investigat­ion.

“The scientists hid, and in fact lied about, those affiliatio­ns, and when they were discovered, those scientists were terminated,” Jeffrey testified.

Bloc MP René Villemure told the committee he is “stunned” that no PHAC employees have faced consequenc­es, after Jeffrey suggested only the two scientists had been discipline­d.

“Make your choice: Was it negligent or incompeten­t?” Villemure asked.

New processes and policies have been put in place to allow the agency to detect “efforts to disguise collaborat­ion and affiliatio­ns and other motivation­s as quickly as possible in the future,” Jeffrey said.

Liberal MP Nathaniel Erskine-Smith repeatedly asked whether these updated protocols would have stopped the unauthoriz­ed shipment of Ebola and Henipah viruses to China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology. She responded that she couldn’t answer a hypothetic­al question.

Erskine-Smith pressed officials on why Qiu was able to send a parcel without anyone raising questions, given she was already under investigat­ion at the time.

“How could there possibly not be red flags?” he asked.

Guillaume Poliquin, who took over the Winnipeg lab months after the two scientists were fired, did not admit any fault in the way Ottawa handled the situation.

“These were allegation­s, and further investigat­ion was ongoing,” he responded.

Conservati­ve MP Michael Chong said he’s hopeful bureaucrat­s will follow through on pledges they made in their testimony to provide MPs with a timeline on when cabinet was made aware of security breaches at the lab.

“What we are trying to accomplish here at this committee is to understand why it took 10 months to secure the lab, which seems an inordinate­ly long period of time,” he said.

MPs need to understand the flow of informatio­n and intelligen­ce within the government, Chong said, so Ottawa can react to any similar incident much faster in the future.

 ?? LYLE STAFFORD, THE CANADIAN PRESS/POOL, REUTERS ?? A lab technician works in a mobile lab at the National Microbiolo­gy Lab in Winnipeg in 2014.
LYLE STAFFORD, THE CANADIAN PRESS/POOL, REUTERS A lab technician works in a mobile lab at the National Microbiolo­gy Lab in Winnipeg in 2014.

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