Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Emergencies Act committee will take secrecy oath

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Feb, 2022 12:34 PM
  • Emergencies Act committee will take secrecy oath

OTTAWA - The government's representative in the Senate says members of a parliamentary committee set up to scrutinize the Emergencies Act will have to take an oath of secrecy.

Sen. Marc Gold also told senators that ministers are receiving hourly police updates about potential threats around the country to assess if the emergency law is still needed.

The Senate is debating whether to confirm the government's decision to invoke the Emergencies Act for the first time in Canadian history over protests and blockades of Canada's borders by people opposing vaccine mandates and other COVID-19 restrictions.

On Monday evening a majority of the House of Commons voted in favour of confirming the act after the NDP backed the minority Liberal government.

The act must also pass through the Senate, which plans to hold extra-long sittings to debate it. If it fails to approve it, the act would be immediately revoked.

If approved, a special joint committee of both the House of Commons and the Senate will be established to carry out a rolling review of the government’s actions under the act.

But Sen. Scott Tannas, leader of the Canadian Senators Group, expressed concern that the committee would not be set up swiftly enough. He asked Gold to commit to explaining every day until it convenes why the committee had not yet been constituted.

In often heated exchanges on Tuesday, Gold faced a barrage of questions from senators, including those querying whether the act was still needed now that the Ottawa protest and blockades of Canada's borders have ended.

"What emergency exists today other than some secret emergency you can't tell us about?" asked Tannas.

Tannas said it was a "testimony to Canadians even when they are hot under the collar and the professionalism of the police" that no one had been seriously hurt in the protests.

Gold said he believed that "the job is not yet done," warning that blockades could return and there are signs some protesters are reconvening.

"The calm we now see may be the calm before other events," he said.

He said ministers were receiving hourly updates from police forces around the country to inform them of potential threats so they could continuously assess if the powers in the act are still required. He said the protests had "metastasized into an explosion of illegal activities."

In lively exchanges, Conservative Sen. Leo Housakos questioned provisions in the Emergencies Act that allow banks to freeze protesters' accounts without a court order. He said a court order is needed even to freeze the bank account of a member of the mafia.

He also accused Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of stoking the flames of division and of not speaking to protesters but speaking down to them and characterizing them as Nazis.

He criticized the prime minister for labelling Tory MPs who have not condemned the protests as supporting people who wave swastikas.

Some protesters were seen flying swastika and Confederate flags and some organizers have been known to promote racist conspiracy theories online.

Gold staunchly defended the prime minister and said he does not recognize the Tory senator's characterization of Trudeau's actions and comments.

He said the Emergencies Act is justified because of the gravity of the protests, adding that everyone could resolve to listen more and listen better.

Sen. Salma Ataullahjan, a Conservative senator who chairs the Senate human rights committee, questioned whether invoking the Emergencies Act could set a precedent.

The government's representative in the second chamber said this question was "a preoccupation of many." Gold said the Emergencies Act was less far reaching with more checks and balances, including parliamentary scrutiny, than its predecessor the War Measures Act.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Protective equipment still scarce for some nurses

Protective equipment still scarce for some nurses
While early indications showed the virus was spread by droplets that settled on surfaces, Silas, president of the Canadian Federation of Nurses, urged health authorities to learn from the SARS outbreak of 2003 and take the highest level of precaution.    

Protective equipment still scarce for some nurses

COVID-19 hospitalizations to surge: Tam

COVID-19 hospitalizations to surge: Tam
Though the rate of people who are hospitalized with Omicron is lower compared to the Delta variant, the forecast shows new daily hospital admissions will far exceed previous historical peaks due to the sheer number of cases.

COVID-19 hospitalizations to surge: Tam

Omicron upends mathematical models tracking COVID

Omicron upends mathematical models tracking COVID
Everything from who gets tested to who's most likely to contract the virus has changed with the latest wave of the pandemic, and that's posing distinct challenges for those who model its impact, says Caroline Colijn, an associate professor of mathematics at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia.

Omicron upends mathematical models tracking COVID

O'Toole opposes Quebec's plan to tax unvaccinated

O'Toole opposes Quebec's plan to tax unvaccinated
The Tory leader made his position known on Premier François Legault's proposal during a Facebook Liveevent late Thursday. Some of his MPs had already taken to social media to condemn the proposal as discriminatory, unethical and punishing to low-income earners.

O'Toole opposes Quebec's plan to tax unvaccinated

B.C. funds OD prevention in construction industry

B.C. funds OD prevention in construction industry
Sheila Malcolmson, the minister of mental health and addictions, says the program dubbed the Tailgate Toolkit was developed on Vancouver Island last year in partnership with people in the industry who have experience with illicit drug use.    

B.C. funds OD prevention in construction industry

Health Canada decision on Pfizer antiviral close

Health Canada decision on Pfizer antiviral close
Canadian health leaders and some premiers have been publicly pressuring Health Canada to greenlight the medication, which prevents the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19 from reproducing within a patient's body. Pfizer's clinical trial showed for high-risk patients it prevented hospitalizations by about 90 per cent.

Health Canada decision on Pfizer antiviral close