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CJFE WILL NOT EXIST THROUGH 2018 UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION NOW.
A journalist from West Africa wrote to us this week. And he was terrified. He was imprisoned by the government and tortured for weeks in revenge for his critical reporting. He was released but still faces constant harassment from police. Could CJFE help?
This is what we did: We immediately provided him with an emergency grant to help him and his family flee a dangerous situation and start a new life in a safe final country. CJFE has saved the lives of hundreds of journalists in this way. Thanks to us, they survived to continue reporting.
When we found out journalists in Quebec were being spied on by police, we launched a campaign for a new law to increase legal protections for the media. Thanks to us, Canadaâs first press shield bill was passed in October.
But next year we may not be there to help.
CJFE is facing an urgent funding crisis, and we need to raise $200,000 to survive through the next year. We have a small staff in a cramped office and nominal overhead beyond the costs of campaigning, but we still have an impact well above our visible size.
#CdnPoli #Canada #BillC51 Thursday, June 21 passed with the usual run of crime, chaos and political lies weâve come to know as âthe newsâ. But it was an important anniversary â and it went almost unnoticed. A year ago, the Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (CJFE), in partnership with the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, launched a Charter of Rights challenge of Stephen Harperâs police state anti-terrorism act, Bill C-51.
I SIGNED THE PETITION, HOPE YOU DO AS WELL!
And not a moment too soon. C-51 handed Canadaâs spy service grotesque new powers that are unconstitutional, indefensible and unnecessary. Short of killing or sexually assaulting âpersons of interestâ in its quest to disrupt activities deemed to be âdangerousâ to national security, CSIS was handed carte blanche by the Harper government. Not a good situation when, at the time, Canada â unlike the United States, Great Britain, Australia and New Zealand â had no parliamentary oversight of the activities of the countryâs spies.
As far as civilian oversight went, Harper starved the Security and Intelligence Review Committee of funding and never even bothered to fill a vacancy (the committee only has five members to begin with). Harper didnât want oversight â he wanted a rubber stamp and zombie appointees. And if Arthur Porter hadnât been accused in a kickback scheme in a Montreal hospital project, Harperâs personal choice to head up SIRC would have continued his oversight of SIRC. (As it happened, he died a fugitive from Canadian justice in a Panamanian jail.)
Basic civil rights went on the chopping block when the bill received Royal Assent in June 2015. The spy service could infringe on free speech because âpromotingâ terrorism was now a jailing offence. CSIS could make more arrests without warrants, even in cases where all the authorities had was the suspicion that an individual âmayâ carry out a terrorist act. The spy agency was no longer restricted to simply gathering intelligence, but now had the power to âdisruptâ suspected terror plots. CSIS could even siphon personal information about an individual from 100 government departments, including the Canada Revenue Agency and Health Canada. And if the spooks planned to break the law or violate the Constitution, they could go before a judge in secret to get pre-approval of their illegal acts.
A lot of things in Harperâs governing record demonstrated his contempt for the Charter of Rights and due process. Nothing showed it better than C-51.
The Liberals, meanwhile, also have a checkered history with this iniquitous piece of legislation. When C-51, with all its warts and red flags, was being rammed through the House of Commons by the Harper majority, Team Trudeau voted with the government. Emotions were running high in October 2014 after Warrant Officer Patrice Vincent and Cpl. Nathan Cirillo were killed by lone-wolf extremists. Harper fast-tracked anti-terror legislation and in just two months came up with C-51.
(Ironically, Vincentâs killer, who made two well-documented attempts to leave the country to join ISIS, could have been arrested under existing pre-C-51 legislation. For some reason, he wasnât.)
With an election in the offing, the Liberals did not want their young leader to be tarred as âsoft on terrorâ â hence their support for C-51. It was still a stunning abdication of the Charter principles Pierre Trudeau bestowed on the country, coming as it did from his own son. The NDP, by comparison, did their jobs â voting against C-51 and attacking it as one of the worst instances of Harperâs abuse of power.
Justin Trudeau did not offer blanket approval. Despite having helped to pass the bill, the Liberals vowed that they would amend it to ensure that it was Charter-compliant. Included in Minister of Public Safety Ralph Goodaleâs mandate letter are explicit instructions to deal with the offensive sections of C-51. The Liberals promised to protect the rights of Canadians to lawful protest and advocacy, to require that government review all appeals by Canadians on the no-fly list, to rein in the Communications Security Establishment (CSE) by requiring a warrant to engage in surveillance of Canadians, and to hold a statutory review of the entire law after three years.
When the new government came to power after the October 2015 election, party officials assured the public that this deeply flawed âsecurity billâ would be âoverhauled without delay.â
A critical part of the Liberalsâ promise to amend C-51 was a pledge to hold public meetings to get citizen and expert input on what needed to be changed. Though the government announced the meetings, none have been held â and C-51 remains in force. While itâs true that Goodale has a full plate in front of him â from prison reform to a broad-ranging national security review â critics of C-51 find the governmentâs inaction disquieting and unacceptable.
And theyâre not taking it sitting down. With their court case in abeyance, the CJFE is renewing its campaign to repeal five offensive sections of the anti-terror legislation.
âWeâre encouraging Canadians to make their voices heard through a new Parliamentary e-petition that calls upon the government to fully commit to a review of Bill C-51 and remove the aspects that violate Canadian Charter rights,â said CJFE Advocacy Director Duncan Pike. âThis is a new system that allows citizens to digitally participate in the federal policy process. The petition needs 500 signatures to be presented in the House of Commons and compel a government response. Right now it has 370.â
That low number of petitioners should alarm every Canadian. According to the CJFE, the two most successful petitions out there right now have 35,000 and 25,000 signatures: The first calls on the Government of Canada to vocally defend the oil and gas industry, while the second demands an end to sales restrictions on the AR-15 semi-automatic rifle. When gun enthusiasts can so completely out-organize the people defending our civil liberties, you know something is badly wrong.
Itâs as if Canadians have forgotten the woefully bad job the Standing Committee on Public Safety did under Harper when holding its clause-by-clause review of Bill C-51 back in March 2015. Green Party Leader Elizabeth May rightly called those deliberations a âsham.â Not a single major amendment of this police state legislation came out of those hopelessly partisan hearings.
Itâs as if Canadians have forgotten that both CSIS and CSE were found guilty earlier this year ofbreaking this countryâs surveillance laws. CSE unlawfully shared data on Canadians with foreign allies, while CSIS violated court orders by retaining communications intercepts it was supposed to destroy.
The reason for this collective amnesia on the perils of unleashing unconstitutional forces in the security establishment isnât hard to nail down. It has something to do with the spate of mass killings â sometimes directly, often loosely, attributed to terrorism â washing across our TV screens recently. From Orlando to Dallas, from Nice to Munich, the maniacs appear to be on the loose. C-51 itself was the illegitimate child of fear and the promise of protection in the wake of similar events in this country.
That is what Donald Trump offers â a world of terror and scapegoats, of doomsday and denunciations. Trumpâs America would be a land of bollards and security checks at every corner, of Uzi-toting police in every public square. I prefer the wise words German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere gave to Der Spiegel:
âNo constitutional state in the world is in a position to prevent every crime, every massacre, or every terrorist act with absolute certainty.â
But every democracy in the world can refuse to barter away foundational civil rights for the illusion of protection. Itâs time for Team Trudeau to get going on the hearings to amend C-51.
The old RCMP Security Service merely burned barns. The new CSIS, armed with C-51, could burn down a democracy.
(via Trudeauâs deafening silence on C-51)
The appointment was right there last Friday in Justin Trudeauâs public itinerary, which the Prime Ministerâs Office sends daily to every Ottawa reporter who cares to sign up. âThe prime minister will attend the Dock Innovators Retreat,â it said. âClosed to media.â
Attend the what?
Googling the mysterious term provided no further information. I was finishing a vacation and assumed some other reporter would ask what the PM had done with his day â normally an interesting question. But by this week nobody had asked. So I did, and here is what Iâve found.
The retreat was a real thing. The dock in question is attached to a sprawling cottage somewhere north of Toronto. Dock and cottage belong to Magna CEO Donald Walker, who welcomed 30 corporate CEOs and tech leaders for a two-day gathering whose correct and somewhat precious name is the âDock (Un)Conference.â
The, uh, Dock was held under the auspices of the C100, an association of Canadian expats working in Silicon Valley. Since 2010 the C100 has been the organized expression of a kind of yearning: that a rising generation of innovative Canadian entrepreneurs wonât have to leave Canada to build the next billion-dollar startup.
The C100 website calls the Dock a âhighly curated event . . . on the future of tech and where Canada can lead.â John Stackhouse, a former Globe and Mail editor now working at the Royal Bank, did the curating. Guests included GE Canada president Elyse Allan. Jordan Banks from Facebook. Tiff Macklem, who left the Bank of Canada to become dean of the Rotman School of Management. Nadir Mohamed, a former Rogers CEO who now runs a venture-capital firm called Scale Up Ventures that gets half its money from the Ontario government. Air Canada CEO Calin Rovinescu. And a mostly younger cohort of rising stars in technology-intensive companies in Canada and California, including Angela Strange, Jennifer Holmstrom and Brendan Frey.
Trudeau appeared in the conference agenda as âSpecial Guestâ and spoke at lunch on Friday. But he also wanted to hear from his hosts because they share a goal: to encourage entrepreneurs and tech companies to stay in Canada in a bid to boost economic growth and enhance Canadiansâ standard of living.
This was the second time in three weeks that Trudeau has showed up at a tech conference in an idyllic locale. At the beginning of July he was at Sun Valley in Idaho for an annual retreat where he met a succession of blue-chip CEOs: Facebookâs Mark Zuckerberg, Amazonâs Jeff Bezos, Appleâs Tim Cook, GMâs Mary Barra, IBMâs Ginni Rometty.
Justin Trudeauâs goal here extends well beyond schmoozing. As he said in Davos in January (more billionaires! More scenery!), attracting foreign investment will be âa key priorityâ of his government. He does not want an increase on the scale of a rounding error. He wants a massive increase in the amount of investment coming into Canada. The country saw such a thing once before, after World War II, when Europe was levelled, America ravenous, and Canadaâs national resources desperately needed by both. What would drive another investment boom now, I asked a Trudeau adviser â resources again?
âTalent.â
Trudeauâs PMO and senior ministers are preoccupied with the firms and the entrepreneurs who get their start in Canada and make their fortune elsewhere. Theyâre concerned about recent raiding expeditions by Google and others to recruit Canadian leaders in the field of artificial intelligence.
Among people who could work anywhere in the world, size and coolness matter when they decide where to move or whether to stay. Waterloo has managed to become a magnet for global expertise in theoretical physics and quantum computing. Over the next year the Trudeau government will seek to reinforce or shore up Canadaâs advantage in three emerging fields: quantum tech; artificial intelligence; and big data and analytics.
Four big themes will drive the Trudeau economic policy through next yearâs budget: innovation, infrastructure, immigration and foreign investment. Where will the money come from? Trudeau has been talking to executives at Blackrock, the worldâs largest asset manager, which controls $5 trillion in investments worldwide.
Increasing Canadaâs share of that titanic portfolio would make a lot of things possible. Trudeau is devoting more and more of his time to figuring out how to make that happen. So are his senior economic ministers â Bill Morneau, Chrystia Freeland, Navdeep Bains. This is how the government is spending its summer.
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