Toronto Star

Senators hold kangaroo court on security

- Haroon Siddiqui Haroon Siddiqui is the Star’s editorial page editor emeritus. His column appears on Thursday and Sunday. hsiddiqui@thestar.ca

The Senate is among our most derided institutio­ns. Yet there has never been a shortage of candidates for it — party hacks, “ethnic leaders” or politician­s rejected at the polls. The late Larry Zolf of the CBC had a running joke that his turn at the upper chamber was imminent, if for no other reason than that his entry would instantly improve its collective IQ.

I thought of Larry while following the hearings of the Senate committee on national security and defence on terrorist threats facing Canada.

The proceeding­s were expectedly mediocre, as the senators asked routine questions of the RCMP, CSIS the spy agency and other agencies. But it soon became clear that this was a kangaroo court.

Parliament is partisan, understood. Its committee hearings are places to ask tough questions, get at the truth. Still, the Conservati­ve majority on the committee — Daniel Lang (chair), Lynn Beyak, Jean-Guy Dagenais, Thanh Hai Ngo, Carolyn Stewart Olsen and Vern White — seems interested only in having its prejudices confirmed: terrorism involving Muslims is “Islamic,” it is manufactur­ed in Canadian mosques that get foreign funding from oil sheiks and where the imams preach “hatred” and radicalize the young. No proof needed.

The committee did not invite groups broadly representa­tive of Canada’s more than one million Muslims. Instead it packed the hearings with ideologica­l soulmates. Take the last session on Feb. 23. The star witness was Marc Lebuis of the Montreal-based Point de Bascule (Tipping Point), which analyzes terrorism.

He accused Muslims of having infiltrate­d Canadian institutio­ns to undermine them. He had a long list — so-and-so was “linked” to this-and-that nefarious figure in North America, Europe or the Middle East, who had said such-andsuch, dating back to the early 19th century. He named names. I asked three of them for their side of the story.

Lebuis called Toronto lawyer Faisal Kutty “the spokespers­on of two Al Qaeda funding organizati­ons,” who “consistent­ly defends and promotes people who are known and banned in certain countries.”

Kutty teaches law at Osgoode and also at Valparaiso University in Indiana. He has written extensivel­y on radicaliza­tion, including what Muslims must do to stop it. He has worked with the RCMP and CSIS, and been consulted by the U.S. House Homeland Security Subcommitt­ee on Intelligen­ce.

He told me Friday that he has already complained to the Senate, saying that Lebuis and his group are “anti-Muslim, anti-Islamic crusaders, searching for subversive­s under every bed

“I’ve never served as a spokespers­on for any terrorist organizati­on. A lawyer representi­ng a client is a far cry from a spokespers­on By their spurious logic, all criminal lawyers must be closet criminals as well

“I have unequivoca­lly condemned violence of all kinds. I have always urged Canadians (including Muslims) to fulfil their patriotic obligation to defend our country, but also to be vigilant in holding our government and its agencies accountabl­e.”

Lebuis named Hamilton lawyer Hussein Hamdani as the one who successful­ly lobbied Ottawa to stop using “Islamic” in relation to terrorism by Muslims.

Hamdani told me that, in 2012, he did speak to Vic Toews, then minister of public safety, at the minister’s invitation. “Mr. Toews came to the Hamilton mosque, with four officials from his ministry, and nine or 10 of us met him there. I did say that the language used by Prime Minister Stephen Harper and others in Ottawa was counterpro­ductive. I compared it with that of President (Barack) Obama, who always asserts that Muslims are part of the American family and part of the solution to terrorism. Yet nowhere has Harper made clear that Canadian Muslims are part of the Canadian family, that they are partners in this battle against terrorism.”

The RCMP and CSIS have since stopped associatin­g terrorism by Muslim individual­s with Islam or mosques, and instead are more specific about terrorist groups and individual­s.

Still, “the suggestion that I somehow strong-armed the government of Canada into changing is amusing. Clearly, the Conservati­ves have not changed.”

Another person Lebuis mentioned is Jamal Badawi, former professor at the Sobey School of Business, St. Mary’s University in Halifax, who is also a prolific author on Islam.

Lebuis said Badawi “started” or “is behind” several Muslim organizati­ons that are part of “the network of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d infrastruc­ture in North America,” and that he has urged Muslims “to become judges and officials” in order to “take advantage of their position of influence to stop applying current national legal provisions that are incompatib­le with sharia law.”

Badawi told me: “Muslim Brotherhoo­d is not a registered entity in Canada or the U.S.A., nor does it have any branch in North America.”

He said he has never urged Muslims to infiltrate the government in order to advance sharia. “I challenge those who make this false allegation to produce evidence, such as a recording in my voice or quotes from my writings, to back up their allegation. I consistent­ly urge Muslims in Canada, U.S.A., Europe and elsewhere to positively integrate in their societies, to fulfil their duties as citizens and to be beneficial to all.”

The committee did not invite groups representa­tive of Canada’s one million Muslims. Instead it packed hearings with ideologica­l soulmates

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada