Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
International

Anti-Terrorism Bill Really About Suppressing Aboriginals, Critics Tell MPs

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Mar, 2015 11:44 AM

    OTTAWA — The federal government's omnibus security bill would hand extremists what they want by shackling civil liberties, a prominent aboriginal lawyer and activist says.

    There is no way to fix the legislation, which "makes us all suspects," said Pamela Palmater, chair in indigenous governance at Toronto's Ryerson University.

    "The terrorists will have won," Palmater said during a meeting of the House of Commons public safety committee, which is hearing more than 50 witnesses on the bill.

    "And what is terrorism? Fundamentally, it's the denial of life, liberty and security of the person. If Canada goes ahead and takes those rights away, terrorists just have to sit back: job done."

    The Conservatives brought in the 62-page bill following the murders of two Canadian soldiers just days apart last October by men whose motives were rooted in extremist thinking.

    The legislation would give the Canadian Security Intelligence Service the ability to actively disrupt terror plots, make it easier for police to limit the movements of a suspect, expand no-fly list powers, crack down on extremist propaganda and dismantle barriers to exchanging security-related information.

    Neither the new disruptive powers nor the information-sharing provisions apply to "lawful" advocacy, protest and dissent, but some critics say these elements of the bill could be used against aboriginal and environmental activists who protest outside the letter of the law.

    Palmater told the committee she is already routinely tracked by federal agencies that keep tabs on her involvement in aboriginal issues.

    Conservative MP Diane Ablonczy stressed that "jihadi terrorists have declared war on Canada," and she tried to dispel any notion the bill would be used to target legitimate dissent.

    Fellow Conservative LaVar Payne dismissed concerns about the legislation's information-sharing provisions as "conspiracy theories."

    The bill "isn't really about terrorism," but about preserving economic and power relations in Canada, Palmater said.

    Citizens have worked too hard to create treaties, the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and international laws that protect basic human rights to toss it all away "because we wanted to protect some corporate economic interests," she added.

    Her arguments were echoed by Grand Chief Stewart Phillip of the Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs, who said the bill would dangerously expand powers of Canada's security agencies without making people any safer.

    Phillip, who also called for withdrawal of the bill, accused the Harper government of retooling its policy-making efforts to foster natural-resource extraction.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Robbers targeting Indian Americans in New Jersey

    Robbers targeting Indian Americans in New Jersey
    Robbers are targeting the homes of Indian Americans in New Jersey post-Diwali, a media report said Saturday....

    Robbers targeting Indian Americans in New Jersey

    US praises Cuba's contribution in fight against Ebola

    US praises Cuba's contribution in fight against Ebola
    US Ambassador to the UN, Samantha Power, praised Cuba's contribution to the fight against Ebola in West Africa, and said that her country is very grateful....

    US praises Cuba's contribution in fight against Ebola

    Chinese citizens get more power to sue government

    Chinese citizens get more power to sue government
    Members of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress passed the amendment to the Administrative Procedure Law through a...

    Chinese citizens get more power to sue government

    One dies as spacecraft explodes in US

    One dies as spacecraft explodes in US
    San Francisco- One person was killed and another badly injured when Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo exploded over southern California's Mojave Desert after takeoff on...

    One dies as spacecraft explodes in US

    US Politics hits a new low: Sexist slur against Indian origin governor Nikki Haley

    US Politics hits a new low: Sexist slur against Indian origin governor Nikki Haley
    Reflecting the falling standard of US politics, the Democratic opponent of South Carolina's Indian-origin Governor Nikki Haley called her...

    US Politics hits a new low: Sexist slur against Indian origin governor Nikki Haley

    21 IS fighters killed in US-led airstrikes in Syria

    21 IS fighters killed in US-led airstrikes in Syria
    Twenty one Islamic State (IS) militants were killed in US-led airstrikes against the Sunni radical group's positions in the predominantly Kurdish...

    21 IS fighters killed in US-led airstrikes in Syria