Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Harper Ratchets Up Powerful Anti-terror Rhetoric; Just Posturing, Trudeau Says

The Canadian Press, 10 Aug, 2015 10:07 AM
    OTTAWA — Stephen Harper ramped up the anti-terror talk Monday, defending Canada's role in the fight against insurgents in the Middle East and slamming his two main rivals for what he considers their misguided opposition to military action.
     
    With the trial of disgraced senator Mike Duffy set to make its dramatic return to the political stage this week, the Conservative leader is escalating the rhetoric as he depicts his party as the only one capable of keeping Canadians safe.
     
    Harper strongly defended the use of Canadian warplanes against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant — also known as ISIL and ISIS — as he promised Canada would  take in more refugees from the region over the next several years.
     
    Offering safe haven to refugees is not enough, the prime minister said during a campaign stop in Markham, Ont.
     
    "ISIS, left to its own devices, will create millions, tens of millions of refugees and victims on a monthly basis," he said.
     
    "That's why the international community intervened ... President Obama and our allies felt we had no choice. We were witnessing mass slaughter at an alarming, lightning pace that was sweeping across the region."
     
    Harper brushed off the criticisms of NDP Leader Tom Mulcair and Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, who reject military action and have urged that Canada stick to providing humanitarian aid.
     
    "If your policy is humanitarian assistance without military support, all you're doing is dropping aid on dead people," Harper said.
     
    " That's not acceptable. We're a country that can contribute militarily and in a humanitarian sense, and we are doing both."
     
    Harper says a re-elected Conservative government would bring in 10,000 additional religious minority refugees from Syria and Iraq, targeting refugees in the region who face persecution or the threat of extremist violence.
     
    On Sunday, the prime minister raised eyebrows with a promise to ban travel to regions controlled by terror groups, saying such travel is "not a human right"— a comment he repeated Monday.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Indian Great-grandfather Nazar Singh, Britain's Oldest Man, Turns 111

    Indian Great-grandfather Nazar Singh, Britain's Oldest Man, Turns 111
    Great-grandfather Nazar Singh was born on June 8, 1904, and has lived through two World Wars, the Titanic, the first moon landing and the invention of colour television.

    Indian Great-grandfather Nazar Singh, Britain's Oldest Man, Turns 111

    Police Say Two 11-Year-Old Girls Missing In Richmond Have Been Found

    Police Say Two 11-Year-Old Girls Missing In Richmond Have Been Found
    The RCMP in Richmond tweeted late Monday that both Emily Whitewood and Daniella Murphy "have been found."

    Police Say Two 11-Year-Old Girls Missing In Richmond Have Been Found

    Two 11-Year-Old Girls Reported Missing In Richmond Since Sunday

    Two 11-Year-Old Girls Reported Missing In Richmond Since Sunday
    RCMP say Emily Whitewood and Daniella Murphy were last seen together on Sunday at about 5 p.m. Their parents reported them missing Monday afternoon.

    Two 11-Year-Old Girls Reported Missing In Richmond Since Sunday

    Police Say 28-Year-Old Passenger Shot In Highly Populated Williams Lake Area

    Police Say 28-Year-Old Passenger Shot In Highly Populated Williams Lake Area
    WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. — Police are asking for the public's help in finding whoever is responsible for shooting a passenger in a vehicle in Williams Lake, B.C.

    Police Say 28-Year-Old Passenger Shot In Highly Populated Williams Lake Area

    Air Canada Investigating No-Screening 'Error' At Vancouver International Airport

    Air Canada Investigating No-Screening 'Error' At Vancouver International Airport
    Air Canada has launched an investigation after a number of passengers on a flight from Beijing to Vancouver entered the country without clearing Canada Customs.

    Air Canada Investigating No-Screening 'Error' At Vancouver International Airport

    B.C. Government Didn't Give Accused Polygamist Fair Warning: Lawyer

    A polygamy charge against the leader of a fundamentalist, Mormon breakaway commune in southeastern British Columbia is unfair and should be thrown out because he wasn't given "fair notice," a court has heard.

    B.C. Government Didn't Give Accused Polygamist Fair Warning: Lawyer