Close X
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Liberals Open To Broad Security Revamp, Not Just 'Problematic Elements': Ralph Goodale

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Jan, 2016 02:09 PM
    OTTAWA — The Liberal government is open to an expansive revamp of national security legislation, not just a handful of promised changes to the controversial bill known as C-51, says Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale.
     
    The government will give Canadians a chance to have their say before deciding what changes to make, Goodale said in an interview with The Canadian Press.
     
    "If the consultation leads to a broader set of action items, obviously we would be guided by what that consultation tells us," Goodale said.
     
    "The subject matter is large, it's complex, the solutions aren't particularly easy to achieve. But our whole point in having consultations is to listen to what we hear. And if the messages indicate that something more needs to be done, obviously we would try to pursue that."
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has asked Goodale to work with Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould to repeal the "problematic elements" of Bill C-51 and introduce new legislation that strengthens accountability with respect to national security while better balancing collective security with rights and freedoms.
     
    The government has pledged to ensure all Canadian Security Intelligence Service warrants respect the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. That would roll back new provisions allowing CSIS to disrupt terror plots through tactics that breach the charter as long as a judge approves.
     
    It has also committed to creating a special committee of parliamentarians to keep an eye on national security operations.
     
    Organizations including Amnesty International Canada and the Ottawa-based International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group have urged the Liberals to go further by implementing neglected 2006 recommendations on comprehensive security review from the inquiry into the overseas torture of Maher Arar.
     
     
    Others have called for a fundamental rethinking of the tools needed to counter jihadi-inspired extremism as well as stronger measures to protect privacy.
     
    Goodale says the Conservative government failed to consult the public properly when it ushered in C-51 after attacks that killed Canadian soldiers in St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que., and Ottawa just days apart in October 2014.
     
    "I think there was a moment there when collaboration of a rare and extraordinary kind was possible. The government chose to go a different way," Goodale said. 
     
    "They chose to proceed unilaterally without that kind of consultation or engagement. And the end result produced a flawed piece of legislation in C-51."
     
    The government hasn't yet decided whether to have a standing committee of Parliament carry out the review or to create a special committee to do the job, he said. The Liberals may also engage in public consultations through "tools and techniques that take us beyond the parliamentary precinct."
     
    "The point here is that we genuinely want to hear from Canadians," he said.
     
    "They didn't have the opportunity before, we want to give them the opportunity now, to make sure that in the resetting of the national security framework, we get it right."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Northern Gateway Talks Excluded Question Of First Nations' Governance Rights

    Northern Gateway Talks Excluded Question Of First Nations' Governance Rights
    Lawyer Cheryl Sharvit says the Nadleh Whut'en and Nak'azdli are not asserting the right to veto resource projects on traditional territories in British Columbia's Central Interior.

    Northern Gateway Talks Excluded Question Of First Nations' Governance Rights

    Quebec Legislature Unanimously Approves Motion Condemning 'Islamophobia' After Muslim Woman Attacked

    Quebec Legislature Unanimously Approves Motion Condemning 'Islamophobia' After Muslim Woman Attacked
    The motion condemned Islamophobia and incitement of hatred and violence toward Muslim Quebecers, in particular Syrian refugees.

    Quebec Legislature Unanimously Approves Motion Condemning 'Islamophobia' After Muslim Woman Attacked

    Marco Muzzo, Suspected Drunk Driver In Vaughn Crash That Left 4 Dead Remanded In Custody

    Marco Muzzo, Suspected Drunk Driver In Vaughn Crash That Left 4 Dead Remanded In Custody
    Marco Muzzo, 29, was in handcuffs when he entered the courtroom wearing jeans and a black short-sleeved shirt overtop a white one.

    Marco Muzzo, Suspected Drunk Driver In Vaughn Crash That Left 4 Dead Remanded In Custody

    New Democrat Invites Miley Cyrus To B.C. To Jump Into Wolf-Caribou Debate

    New Democrat Invites Miley Cyrus To B.C. To Jump Into Wolf-Caribou Debate
    New Democrat Michelle Mungall who represents the Kootenay riding of Nelson-Creston in the legislature is inviting Cyrus to visit her region

    New Democrat Invites Miley Cyrus To B.C. To Jump Into Wolf-Caribou Debate

    She Was The Love Of My Life, Sobs Murder Suspect Damien Taylor, Hours After Kamloops Teen's Slaying

    She Was The Love Of My Life, Sobs Murder Suspect Damien Taylor, Hours After Kamloops Teen's Slaying
    A sobbing Damien Taylor recounted to RCMP, hours after his girlfriend CJ Fowler was found dead, how the two were brought to Kamloops, B.C., to deal drugs.

    She Was The Love Of My Life, Sobs Murder Suspect Damien Taylor, Hours After Kamloops Teen's Slaying

    Kingston, Ont. Man Doesn't Care Which Federal Election Signs He Damages: Police

    Kingston, Ont. Man Doesn't Care Which Federal Election Signs He Damages: Police
    They say the man told police he blamed one politician for having an agenda against him.

    Kingston, Ont. Man Doesn't Care Which Federal Election Signs He Damages: Police