Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Civil Society Coalition Takes Aim At Harper Government For Stifling Dissent

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jun, 2015 12:06 PM
    OTTAWA — A report coming out today accuses the Harper government of stifling dissent and crushing democracy by punishing civil society groups.
     
    That complaint has been voiced against the Conservatives in the past, but now a 66-page report documents the grievances of groups that it says were denied money by the government or subject to other forms of intimidation.
     
    The report is being released under the banner of Voices-Voix and its signatories include the heads of Amnesty International Canada, Greenpeace Canada and the former head of Oxfam Canada.
     
    The coalition of 200 organizations and 500 individuals accuses the government of taking away funding or otherwise intimidating organizations that it disagrees with.
     
    It accuses the government of muzzling scientists and public servants and portraying First Nations and aboriginal groups as threats to national security.
     
    As a result, the report says, the government is silencing the public policy debate on important issues.
     
    "We have borne witness to hundreds of cases in which individuals, organizations and institutions have been intimidated, defunded, shut down or vilified by the federal government," the report states.
     
    The report accuses the government of targeting dozens of charities that it deems "too political" for its taste.
     
    It also says the government has undermined the function of Justice Department lawyers by discouraging them from giving important advice to the government.
     
    And it points to the "muzzling" of several government watchdog agencies, citing the sacking of senior leadership at the Canadian Wheat Board and the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission.
     
    It also accuses the government of undermining the work of the military ombudsman, the Commission for Public Complaints against the RCMP, the federal commissioner of the environment and the correctional services investigator.
     
    The report says the government has mounted an attack on "evidence-based" policy-making and cites Statistics Canada, which has undergone an 18 per cent staff reduction and $30 million in budget cuts since 2012.
     
    It also takes the government to task for doing away with the long-form census.
     
    "Canadians deserve a vibrant and dynamic democracy and they are capable of building that together," the report concludes.
     
    "It is the job of government to support those engaged in this task, not undercut and destroy their striving for a better and more inclusive democracy."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Former Quebec Premier Jacques Parizeau To Lie In State In Provincial Capital

    Former Quebec Premier Jacques Parizeau To Lie In State In Provincial Capital
    MONTREAL — Jacques Parizeau will lie in the state today at the Quebec legislature, giving Quebecers a second day to pay their respects to the former premier.

    Former Quebec Premier Jacques Parizeau To Lie In State In Provincial Capital

    Vancouver Police Looking For Two People Who Approached Kids Near Elementary School

    Vancouver Police Looking For Two People Who Approached Kids Near Elementary School
    Const. Brian Montague says a silver Honda Civic sedan stopped just after 1 p.m. outside L'Ecole Anne Hebert Elementary School (on Killarney Street near East 56th Avenue).

    Vancouver Police Looking For Two People Who Approached Kids Near Elementary School

    Mounties Help Deliver Baby Fawn After Striking Deer In Nova Scotia

    Mounties Help Deliver Baby Fawn After Striking Deer In Nova Scotia
    HALIFAX — Two RCMP officers in Nova Scotia are being credited with saving the life of a baby fawn after striking its mother with a police vehicle.

    Mounties Help Deliver Baby Fawn After Striking Deer In Nova Scotia

    Four Winning Tickets Sold For Friday's $50 Million Lotto Max Jackpot

    There are four winning tickets for last night's $50 million grand prize — each of them worth 12-and-a-half million dollars.

    Four Winning Tickets Sold For Friday's $50 Million Lotto Max Jackpot

    Federal Response To Residential School Study Disappointing, Wynne Says

    COLLINGWOOD, Ont. — Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne calls the federal government's response to recommendations from a six-year study of Canada's residential schools legacy "disappointing."

    Federal Response To Residential School Study Disappointing, Wynne Says

    Pot Is No Risk-free High For Teens With Developing Brains: Psychiatrists

    Pot Is No Risk-free High For Teens With Developing Brains: Psychiatrists
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Scientific studies increasingly suggest marijuana may not be the risk-free high that teens — and sometimes their parents — think it is, researchers say.

    Pot Is No Risk-free High For Teens With Developing Brains: Psychiatrists