Close X
Monday, December 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Conservative MP Wai Young Makes U-Turn On 1985 Air India Bombing Remarks

The Canadian Press, 15 Jul, 2015 11:47 AM
    OTTAWA — A Conservative MP is backtracking on her claim that Canada's spy agency knew there was a bomb on an Air India plane that exploded in flight three decades ago, killing 329 people.
     
    In a late June speech at a Vancouver church, Tory MP Wai Young said the laws at the time prevented the Canadian Security Intelligence Service from telling the RCMP about the explosive device.
     
    Young told the service at Harvest City Church that, as a result, the Mounties could not remove the bomb from Air India Flight 182 before it left Canada in June 1985. The plane blew apart off the coast of Ireland, claiming the lives of scores of Canadians.
     
    She said the government's recently enacted Bill C-51 remedied the problem by allowing greater information-sharing between agencies.
     
    Asked Tuesday if she stood by her remarks, Young at first sidestepped the question, saying the government passed the bill because the threat of jihadi terrorism is real.
     
     
    "That is why this legislation is so important and necessary. I will continue to work with our government to ensure that Canadian communities are strengthened and protected."
     
    But little more than a half-hour later, Young issued a statement saying she "misspoke with regards to the investigation of the Air India bombing" in her speech at the church service.
     
    Young says she regrets the error.
     
    A federal commission of inquiry into the Air India tragedy did not conclude in its June 2010 report that CSIS knew there was a bomb on the plane.
     
    Rather, it said government agencies had significant pieces of information that, taken together, would have led a competent analyst to conclude that Flight 182 was at high risk of being bombed by known Sikh terrorists in June 1985.
     
     
    Young presented a different version of events to churchgoers.
     
    "CSIS knew, or heard, that there was a bomb on board this plane," Young said, adding that "strict laws" prevented agencies from sharing information at the time.
     
    "I don't know if you guys know that. Because they couldn't share that information with the RCMP, the RCMP could not act to take that bomb off that plane," Young said.
     
    The office of Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney referred inquiries to Young.
     
    In her June 30 speech, first reported by the leftist Press Progress blog, Young said the Conservatives were working "in the same vein" as Jesus by ushering in Bill C-51 and other criminal justice legislation. Jesus "served and acted to always do the right thing, not the most popular thing," she said.
     
     
    Her comments unleashed a whirlwind of mockery on Twitter.
     
    In the speech, Young also said she had stopped reading newspapers because "most of the facts in there are not factual."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Woman Killed In Port Alberni, B.C. After Early-Morning Attack

    Woman Killed In Port Alberni, B.C. After Early-Morning Attack
      PORT ALBERNI, B.C. — A woman has been killed in Port Alberni, B.C., and RCMP in the Vancouver Island city say the case is a homicide.

    Woman Killed In Port Alberni, B.C. After Early-Morning Attack

    B.C. Ministry Failed To Protect Children Sexually Abused By Father: Judge

    B.C. Ministry Failed To Protect Children Sexually Abused By Father: Judge
    B.C. Supreme Court Justice Paul Walker also ruled the father sexually abused his toddler while the kids were in the care of the Children's Ministry.

    B.C. Ministry Failed To Protect Children Sexually Abused By Father: Judge

    Canadian Dollar Plunges To Post-recession Low After Central Bank Cuts Key Interest Rate

    Canadian Dollar Plunges To Post-recession Low After Central Bank Cuts Key Interest Rate
    The loonie was down more than a full U.S. cent Wednesday afternoon at levels not seen since March 2009, when Canada was in the midst of a deep recession.

    Canadian Dollar Plunges To Post-recession Low After Central Bank Cuts Key Interest Rate

    Bank Of Canada Cuts Key Rate To 0.5 Per Cent, Slashes Economic Outlook

    Bank Of Canada Cuts Key Rate To 0.5 Per Cent, Slashes Economic Outlook
    The Bank of Canada said its lower outlook for growth was due to three factors: Canadian oil producers cutting their investment plans, slowing growth in China and non-resource exports faltering — a trend it described as "a puzzle that merits further study."

    Bank Of Canada Cuts Key Rate To 0.5 Per Cent, Slashes Economic Outlook

    Alert Raised At UBC's Point Grey Campus As Police Search For Increasingly Brazen Voyeur

    Alert Raised At UBC's Point Grey Campus As Police Search For Increasingly Brazen Voyeur
    VANCOUVER — Women are being warned about a peeping Tom prowling around two dormitories at the University of British Columbia's Point Grey campus in Vancouver.

    Alert Raised At UBC's Point Grey Campus As Police Search For Increasingly Brazen Voyeur

    Victoria, Montreal And Gatineau, Que., Top Cities For Women To Live In Canada

    Victoria, Montreal And Gatineau, Que., Top Cities For Women To Live In Canada
    TORONTO — A new study says life is better for women who live in cities such as Victoria, Gatineau, Que., and Montreal compared to Edmonton, Calgary and Ontario's Waterloo Region.

    Victoria, Montreal And Gatineau, Que., Top Cities For Women To Live In Canada

    PrevNext