Close X
Saturday, November 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Singh says he doesn't understand why Poilievre won't get top security clearance

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Oct, 2024 11:58 AM
  • Singh says he doesn't understand why Poilievre won't get top security clearance

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says it's very disturbing that Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre won't get the top-level security clearance needed to view classified documents on foreign interference.

Singh said party leaders need to be briefed on top-secret information, noting the allegations this week that Indian agents played a role in the extortion, coercion and murder of Canadian citizens on Canadian soil. 

"You've got these serious allegations that a foreign government literally hired gangs in Canada to go out and shoot up people's homes and people's businesses, Canadians' lives are put at risk. Does that sound like the response of a leader who's taking it seriously, who actually is concerned about safety?" Singh said at a press conference in Toronto on Thursday.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told a public inquiry into foreign interference on Wednesday that he has the names of past and present Conservative parliamentarians and candidates who are linked to foreign interference. Trudeau also said other party members, including Liberals, have also been flagged.

"I have the names of a number of parliamentarians, former parliamentarians and-or candidates in the Conservative Party of Canada who are engaged (in) or at high risk of, or for whom there is clear intelligence around foreign interference," Trudeau said.

Poilievre shot back, accusing the prime minister of lying under oath, and saying he should release the names.

"If Justin Trudeau has evidence to the contrary, he should share it with the public. Now that he has blurted it out in general terms at a commission of inquiry — he should release the facts. But he won't — because he is making it up," Poilievre said in a statement on Wednesday.

Poilievre said he received a briefing from top security officials on Oct. 14 concerning the alleged Indian foreign interference, adding that the CSIS Act allows the government to warn Canadians about specific foreign interference risks without them first being sworn to secrecy.

Additionally, Poilievre said his chief of staff receives confidential briefings, and neither he nor government officials have told the Opposition leader about any Conservative parliamentarian knowingly taking part in foreign inference. 

Singh said that's not good enough for him.

"I want to look at the information myself. I don't want to outsource that to someone else. If it's something impacting my party and I'm the leader of my party, I want to make sure I want to know what's going on," Singh said. 

Singh said he also wants to see the names released in a way that doesn't compromise national security laws.

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May also has the necessary security clearance to view top-secret documents and echoed the call for Poilievre to do the same. 

"The only way for Canadians to know that the Official Opposition has not been compromised through foreign interference is for its leader to seek and obtain top secret security clearance. I have urged him to do so since June 2024. With greater urgency, I urge him to do so now," May said in a statement. 

She made reference to the public version of the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians report on foreign interference released in the spring, which flagged alleged attempts by India to interfere in a Conservative leadership race. 

"Pierre Poilievre is the only person in a position to clear the air about the Conservative party and any potential favours owed to foreign interest," May said.

Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet has said he intends to get security clearance to review the documents. His press secretary Joanie Riopel said Blanchet is in the final stages of receiving that approval. 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Mountie charged with dangerous driving causing bodily harm

B.C. Mountie charged with dangerous driving causing bodily harm
The BC Prosecution Service says the charge for Cst. Robby Pawar stems from an incident that is alleged to have happened on Dec. 3, 2021, in Delta, B.C. The Mountie's first appearance is scheduled to take place on August 2, 2023 in Surrey Provincial Court.

B.C. Mountie charged with dangerous driving causing bodily harm

Union and employers receive mediator's terms to end B.C. port strike, source says

Union and employers receive mediator's terms to end B.C. port strike, source says
The delivery of the terms comes after federal Labour Minister Seamus O'Regan late Tuesday instructed the mediator to send him the terms within 24 hours so he could forward them to the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Canada and the B.C. Maritime Employers Association.

Union and employers receive mediator's terms to end B.C. port strike, source says

Four years after passage of law on abandoned boats, only two fines have been levied

Four years after passage of law on abandoned boats, only two fines have been levied
The government introduced the Wrecked, Abandoned or Hazardous Vessels Act in 2017. It passed in February 2019 and took effect that July. It made it illegal to abandon a boat in Canada and gives the government the power to go after boat owners when their vessels are wrecked or left behind, including fines up to $1 million.

Four years after passage of law on abandoned boats, only two fines have been levied

High speed chase on Surrey's Hwy 99

High speed chase on Surrey's Hwy 99
Police say it started just after nine last night when the driver of the C-L-S-550 fled the traffic stop, and the vehicle was located a short time later on Highway 99 south of the Serpentine River overpass. The investigation closed the highway for hours, but traffic is now moving again.   

High speed chase on Surrey's Hwy 99

Zelenskyy declares NATO summit victory for Ukraine as Canada, allies pledge more help

Zelenskyy declares NATO summit victory for Ukraine as Canada, allies pledge more help
As Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and other NATO leaders wrapped up their two-day summit Wednesday, they bid farewell to a very different version of Volodymyr Zelenskyy than the one they had met the day before. Ukraine's president declared the meetings a success, even though he left without the thing he had most vehemently argued for: a quick invitation for his country to join the alliance.

Zelenskyy declares NATO summit victory for Ukraine as Canada, allies pledge more help

More evacuations, alerts, reflect difficult wildfire season in B.C., Yukon

More evacuations, alerts, reflect difficult wildfire season in B.C., Yukon
At least 12 new evacuation orders or alerts have been issued over the last day in British Columbia as lightning storms and drought conditions add to the challenge of fighting hundreds of wildfires. The BC Wildfire Service says just over two-thirds of the province's roughly 330 fires are raging in those two centres.

More evacuations, alerts, reflect difficult wildfire season in B.C., Yukon