Close X
Friday, September 20, 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

    John McCallum To Increase Intake Of Privately Sponsored Syrian Refugee

    John McCallum To Increase Intake Of Privately Sponsored Syrian Refugee
    The Immigration Department will now process all applications for Syrians received as of Mar. 31 with an eye towards getting a further 10,000 to Canada by the end of this year or early 2017.

    John McCallum To Increase Intake Of Privately Sponsored Syrian Refugee

    Barriers, Warning Signs To Go Up At Peggy's Cove After Tourists Swept Off Rocks

    Barriers, Warning Signs To Go Up At Peggy's Cove After Tourists Swept Off Rocks
    The Nova Scotia government says it plans to install safety signs, interpretive panels and a video message warning of the sea's power at Peggy's Cove.

    Barriers, Warning Signs To Go Up At Peggy's Cove After Tourists Swept Off Rocks

    Donald Trump Says Abortion Ban Should Yield 'Punishment' For Woman

    Donald Trump Says Abortion Ban Should Yield 'Punishment' For Woman
    In a heated exchange with MSNBC host Chris Matthews at the taping of a town hall in Green Bay, Wisconsin that will air on Wednesday night, Trump was asked whether he believes that abortion should be outlawed in the country.

    Donald Trump Says Abortion Ban Should Yield 'Punishment' For Woman

    Drive-Thru Rage: Drivers In Line At Tim Hortons In Winnipeg Fight, 1 Stabbed

    Drive-Thru Rage: Drivers In Line At Tim Hortons In Winnipeg Fight, 1 Stabbed
    WINNIPEG — A morning coffee run took a violent turn at a Tim Hortons in Winnipeg.

    Drive-Thru Rage: Drivers In Line At Tim Hortons In Winnipeg Fight, 1 Stabbed

    Search Expands For Missing Nunavut Politician And Companions

    Search Expands For Missing Nunavut Politician And Companions
    The search is expanding on the tundra of Baffin Island for a Nunavut member of the legislature and his two companions who haven't been seen for more than a week.

    Search Expands For Missing Nunavut Politician And Companions

    Ottawa Testing Drones As Way To Gather Information On Ice Conditions

    Ottawa Testing Drones As Way To Gather Information On Ice Conditions
    The federal government is looking at adding a high-tech gadget to its information-gathering arsenal.

    Ottawa Testing Drones As Way To Gather Information On Ice Conditions