Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

Feds need hotline to report foreign agents: Tories

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Nov, 2020 06:30 PM
  • Feds need hotline to report foreign agents: Tories

Canadians who say they have been victims of threats and intimidation by Chinese, Iranian and Russian foreign agents argue domestic police forces are ill-equipped to deal with their concerns.

They are calling on the federal government to establish a hotline for their complaints because they say they've been getting the runaround from Canadian law enforcement when they try to report death threats against themselves, or intimidation of their loved ones abroad.

Genuis was following up on his party's successful motion in the House of Commons last week to compel the Liberal government to take a harder line against national security threats from China.

He assembled four people via video link to a Parliament Hill press conference today, where they gave harrowing accounts of threats and harassment from foreign agents operating on Canadian soil.

They included members of Canada's Tibetan and Uighur communities, a man whose wife was killed in Iran's Jan. 8 shootdown of a Ukrainian Airlines passenger jet and a Canadian filmmaker and journalist who specializes in Russia.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

U.S. vote could affect Canada's immigration plans

U.S. vote could affect Canada's immigration plans
A new poll by Leger and the Association for Canadian Studies suggests Canadians are feeling skittish about any planned increases to immigration next year, after months of low numbers of new arrivals due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

U.S. vote could affect Canada's immigration plans

Canada-U. S. refugee pact remains in place for now

Canada-U. S. refugee pact remains in place for now
In a new ruling, Federal Court of Appeal Justice David Stratas has sided with the Trudeau government in extending the life of the Safe Third Country Agreement.

Canada-U. S. refugee pact remains in place for now

Feds split housing funds between big cities

Feds split housing funds between big cities
Canada's biggest city, Toronto, will get the lion's share of that funding pie with about $203 million.

Feds split housing funds between big cities

Trudeau says pandemic 'really sucks'

Trudeau says pandemic 'really sucks'
Acknowledging frustrations around partial lockdowns and scrapped Halloween plans in some parts of the country, Trudeau said Tuesday that Canadians need to gird themselves for a "tough winter ahead."

Trudeau says pandemic 'really sucks'

Watchdog urges pause on assisted death in prisons

Watchdog urges pause on assisted death in prisons
Federal correctional investigator Ivan Zinger says there are three known cases of doctor-assisted death in federal prisons and each raises questions around consent, choice and dignity.

Watchdog urges pause on assisted death in prisons

Artistic impulse ends badly in Nanaimo, B.C

Artistic impulse ends badly in Nanaimo, B.C
Nanaimo RCMP say an officer was called to a doughnut shop on Sunday when staff reported someone had just spray-painted the shop floor.

Artistic impulse ends badly in Nanaimo, B.C