Toronto Star

CBSA under fire for letting TV exploit raid

- NICHOLAS KEUNG IMMIGRATIO­N REPORTER

The decision by federal officials, including Public Safety Minister Vic Toews, to allow an immigratio­n raid to be filmed for a reality TV series has drawn public outrage — and now a formal complaint to the federal Privacy Commission­er.

The British Columbia Civil Liberties Associatio­n lodged the complaint Thursday against the Canada Border Services Agency, on behalf of Oscar Mata Duran, one of the eight arrested migrant workers, for breaching his privacy rights under Canadian laws.

“Federal agents should not come crashing into people’s workplaces and homes with commercial TV crews filming their actions like some sort of action movie,” Josh Paterson, executive director of BCCLA, told a Vancouver news conference.

The complaint against the Canada Border Services Agency claims a man’s privacy rights were breached

“The federal government must respect the rights of every person it deals with, regardless of their immigratio­n status.”

The TV series Border Security —a show about the day-to-day work of border agents — airs on National Geographic Channel and is produced by Vancouver-based Force Four Entertainm­ent.

According to the complaint, Mata Duran was asked to sign a consent form about an hour after he was interrogat­ed in front of TV cameras last week, allegedly without a full explanatio­n of what he was signing or how the video footage would be used. The complaint said Mata Duran cannot be considered to have freely given his consent under those circumstan­ces.

It was later revealed that Toews had approved the filming.

“The privacy of individual­s is protected at all times; however, it is important to remember that illegal immigrants cost law-abiding Canadian taxpayers millions of dollars each year and thousands of jobs,” Toews told parliament­arians during Question Period this week.

The government’s defence of the action provoked further public outrage.

“It is abhorrent that the federal government has adopted a private company to turn deportatio­n into entertainm­ent,” said Harsha Walia, of No One Is Illegal. “This U.S.-style raid and U.S.-style reality show only serves to promote fear.”

A petition to cancel Border Security, launched on the website change.org, had collected more than 20,000 signatures as of Thursday.

 ??  ?? Public Safety Minister Vic Toews approved the filming of the series.
Public Safety Minister Vic Toews approved the filming of the series.

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