Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Harper Comments On Islam Damaged Relations With Muslims: Former CSIS Analyst

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Oct, 2015 01:13 PM
    OTTAWA — Stephen Harper's comments about the threat of "Islamicism" strained the fragile trust federal officials built with Muslim Canadians in the fight against terrorism, says a former analyst with Canada's spy agency.
     
    The frequently harsh tone Harper and his cabinet members struck with Muslims created a rift the new Liberal government must work to overcome, said Phil Gurski, who spent almost 13 years at the Canadian Security Intelligence Service before moving to Public Safety Canada.
     
    Rebuilding trust will be an important element in national counter-extremism efforts by police and community groups, said Gurski, a specialist in radicalization and homegrown terrorism now working as a private threat and risk consultant. 
     
    "I think now that with a new government, we have at least the opportunity to start — not with a blank slate — but to kind of reset the relationship," he said in an interview.
     
    This week marks the grim anniversary of two fatal attacks on Canadian soldiers by men with jihadist sympathies.
     
    One year ago Thursday, Michael Zehaf Bibeau shot Cpl. Nathan Cirillo, an honour guard at the National War Memorial, before rushing into Parliament's Centre Block. Zehaf Bibeau was quickly gunned down.
     
    Two days earlier, Martin Couture-Rouleau had fatally rammed Warrant Officer Patrice Vincent with a car in St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que. After a chase, police shot and killed the knife-wielding assailant.
     
    Gurski said security agencies need to continue investigating potential threats, but the government must also do more to support police and community-led programs to stop young people from becoming radicalized in the first place.
     
     
    He has distilled his insights into a book, "The Threat from Within," published this week.
     
    He praises grassroots counter-radicalization initiatives — noting such efforts work better than government-run ones — and lauds the police services active in the field, notably Toronto and Calgary.
     
    In the federal sphere, Public Safety and the RCMP have guided the efforts, with CSIS playing a background role. At Public Safety, Gurski worked with the department's citizen engagement bureau.
     
    "We fanned the country talking to communities, talking about radicalization, showing them what it looks like and then getting them to proffer their own solutions and their own ideas on how to counter it."
     
    But that bridge-building with communities was "certainly tested" in September 2011 when Harper told CBC-TV the major threat to Canada "is still Islamicism."
     
    "I think people were taken aback by the comments," Gurski said. "And I think the question was asked, 'What does that really mean? Does he mean Islam is a threat to national security?'"
     
    Gurski notes a similar tone in government messaging that followed on omnibus security legislation, the attempt to ban the niqab at citizenship ceremonies and the federal opposition to so-called "barbaric practices" such as forced marriage. 
     
    Counter-radicalization programming simply doesn't work unless there's a relationship with community leaders, he said.
     
    "Because if people don't trust you and don't like your message, they're not going to work with you, and they're not going to come out and listen to you. We've clearly seen that in the past, so you've got to fix the one before you can continue the other."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Modi Magic? India, Canada Poised For New Highs In Relations!

    Modi Magic? India, Canada Poised For New Highs In Relations!
    The premier trade and business body between the two countries says the visit of Prime Minister Narendra Modi here in April has put the growing bilateral ties on a fast track.

    Modi Magic? India, Canada Poised For New Highs In Relations!

    Federal Party Leaders Agree To Skip Jays Games After Toronto Losses When They Attended

    Federal Party Leaders Agree To Skip Jays Games After Toronto Losses When They Attended
    The Jays lost games when Tom Mulcair, Stephen Harper and Justin Trudeau were in the stands.

    Federal Party Leaders Agree To Skip Jays Games After Toronto Losses When They Attended

    Re-Elected Conservatives Would Create $15Million Fund To Match Private Museum Donations

    Re-Elected Conservatives Would Create $15Million Fund To Match Private Museum Donations
    OTTAWA — A re-elected Conservative government would create an endowment fund for museums that would match the money the institutions raise privately.

    Re-Elected Conservatives Would Create $15Million Fund To Match Private Museum Donations

    Manitoba Appeals Court Says Sentence For Two Cyberbullies Exceeded The Maximum

    Manitoba Appeals Court Says Sentence For Two Cyberbullies Exceeded The Maximum
     An appeals court in Manitoba has sided with two brothers who argued that their youth sentences for cyberbullying a teenage girl were too long.

    Manitoba Appeals Court Says Sentence For Two Cyberbullies Exceeded The Maximum

    Wide Net Cast For Jurors In High-profile Murder Trial Of Dennis Oland

    Wide Net Cast For Jurors In High-profile Murder Trial Of Dennis Oland
    The Oland family can trace its business roots in the Maritimes to the 1860s, when Susannah Oland left England and began selling a family recipe for a brown October ale from The Army and Navy Brewery in Halifax.

    Wide Net Cast For Jurors In High-profile Murder Trial Of Dennis Oland

    Two Trains Derail Near Golden, B.C., No Injuries Or Spills Reported

    Two Trains Derail Near Golden, B.C., No Injuries Or Spills Reported
    Several cars derailed, including the first two locomotives and the first car — an empty potash car — of the eastbound train.

    Two Trains Derail Near Golden, B.C., No Injuries Or Spills Reported