Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada Border Services Agency Rapped For Secrecy Over Deaths Amid Calls For More Oversight

The Canadian Press, 01 Apr, 2016 12:57 PM
    OTTAWA — The federal border agency is hiding behind privacy law when it refuses to discuss the death of an immigrant in custody, say groups who want more independent oversight of the agency.
     
    The Canada Border Services Agency detains people who are considered a flight risk or a danger to the public, those who arrive in very large groups, and newcomers whose identities cannot be confirmed.
     
    Since the border agency was established in 2003, 11 people have died in custody — two in federal holding centres and nine in provincial facilities, according to the agency.
     
    The two most recent deaths happened in the span of a week in March, reigniting calls for more scrutiny of the organization, which has many of the powers of a police service.
     
    In each case, the border agency issued a brief statement without the individual's name or information about how they died.
     
    An agency spokeswoman said the federal Privacy Act prevented the release of details.
     
     
    During a teleconference Thursday, several human rights and refugee groups challenged that claim.
     
    Alex Neve, secretary general of Amnesty International Canada, called it an "exaggerated reading" of the Privacy Act.
     
    He noted the law allows agencies to invoke exceptions in the public interest or in the interest of the person whose personal information is involved. 
     
    Federal agencies have obligations under the Privacy Act, but the fact that a death occurs in border agency custody, and the circumstances around it, should become public, said Josh Paterson, executive director of the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association.
     
    "They definitely need to be more transparent in relation to their operations."
     
    Monia Mazigh of the Ottawa-based International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group said the lack of available information amounted to excuses — attempts to avoid discussion of tragic deaths and the actions that caused them.
     
     
    The office of Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said recently the government was examining how best to provide the border agency "with appropriate review mechanisms."
     
    Neve said the silence around deaths underscores the importance of effective review and oversight, so that issues around privacy can be "more reliably and independently worked out."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Info About Unruly Passengers Should Be Shared To Help Keep The Skies Safer: Air Canada

    Info About Unruly Passengers Should Be Shared To Help Keep The Skies Safer: Air Canada
    Air carriers should be allowed to share information about unruly passengers to help keep the skies safer, Canada's largest airline says.

    Info About Unruly Passengers Should Be Shared To Help Keep The Skies Safer: Air Canada

    Shipbuilders Call For Federal Strategy Overhaul To Avoid An 'Embarrassment'

    Shipbuilders Call For Federal Strategy Overhaul To Avoid An 'Embarrassment'
    The Shipbuilding Association of Canada is hoping the Liberal government will change course when it comes to the renewal of the country's navy and civilian fleets.

    Shipbuilders Call For Federal Strategy Overhaul To Avoid An 'Embarrassment'

    Second-Degree Murder Charges Laid Against Randy Scott In Death Of Pitt Meadows, B.C., Man

    Second-Degree Murder Charges Laid Against Randy Scott In Death Of Pitt Meadows, B.C., Man
    A charge of second-degree murder has been laid against a man after a fatal shooting in Maple Ridge, B.C. Randy Scott turned himself into police on Tuesday.

    Second-Degree Murder Charges Laid Against Randy Scott In Death Of Pitt Meadows, B.C., Man

    Drummers, Dancers Welcome B.C.'s 1st Female Aboriginal MLA Melanie Mark To Legislature

    Drummers, Dancers Welcome B.C.'s 1st Female Aboriginal MLA Melanie Mark To Legislature
    Mark is one of two New Democrats who won byelections earlier this month.

    Drummers, Dancers Welcome B.C.'s 1st Female Aboriginal MLA Melanie Mark To Legislature

    B.C. Teacher Fired For Sending Inappropriate Emails To A Grade 11 Student, 2 Others Disciplined

    B.C. Teacher Fired For Sending Inappropriate Emails To A Grade 11 Student, 2 Others Disciplined
    A decision by the Teacher Regulation Branch in January, but only posted online recently, shows Daphne Neal agrees to the permanent removal of her teaching certificate, although she was fired from her teaching job in 2013.

    B.C. Teacher Fired For Sending Inappropriate Emails To A Grade 11 Student, 2 Others Disciplined

    SPCA Hopes For Charges After 70 Cats And Dogs Seized In Surrey, B.C.

    SPCA Hopes For Charges After 70 Cats And Dogs Seized In Surrey, B.C.
    Another 70 animals have been seized by the B.C. SPCA, less than a month after the animal welfare agency rescued more than six dozen dogs from a puppy mill.

    SPCA Hopes For Charges After 70 Cats And Dogs Seized In Surrey, B.C.