Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Stephane Dion Says Embassy Safety Top Priority As Government Faces Funding Challenges

The Canadian Press, 14 Mar, 2016 11:39 AM
    OTTAWA — When worry wakes Foreign Affairs Minister Stephane Dion in the middle of the night, one topic is the main culprit: concern over the safety of Canada's diplomats abroad. His concern seems well-founded.
     
    Sunday's car bombing in the Turkish capital of Ankara, following a suicide bombing three weeks ago, left more than two dozen dead. Canada's embassy in its NATO ally is about six kilometres from the location of Sunday's attack.
     
    Government documents also reveal that the cost of keeping Canada's diplomats safe is rising faster than the government predicted.
     
    Terrorism, civil unrest, criminal gangs and natural disasters pose threats to Canadian diplomats, says a memo on security at foreign missions prepared for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that was obtained under Access to Information.
     
    This past week, Dion's renamed department, Global Affairs Canada, said the government is continually assessing the threats faced at its embassies as it released its new Plans and Priorities report.
     
    "It's my top priority," Dion said in a recent interview.
     
    "There's nothing more important for me than that."
     
    Asked what he plans to do to fix the situation, the minister replied: "I have made that very clear, that I don't want to compromise the security of my people, and their families, by the way."
     
    The prime minister's briefing note says Canadian missions face "evolving risks at a time when security resources are diminishing."
     
    The foreign affairs department has used "one-time funding" to complete security upgrades "at high-threat missions." It has trained a group of new Security Program Managers that have been deployed at 30 high threat missions, the memo says.
     
    But it also notes constant resource challenges.
     
    "The financial cost of sustaining deployed security operations is rising rapidly, well beyond initial forecasts made a few years ago," the memo says,
     
    It says the department is "currently assessing future threats, mission security requirements" and "cost sharing opportunities" to find a sustainable way to protect people, information and assets abroad.
     
    "Terrorism and armed conflict have fundamentally altered the risks to (government of Canada) staff abroad; however they represent only a portion of the contemporary threat profile."
     
    It cites a rise in "civil unrest" in the last five years, "violent criminality in large swaths of Latin America and Africa," natural disasters in Haiti, the Philippines and Japan as well as "a range of hostile espionage activities."
     
    The Plans and Priorities report highlights the threats from cyber attacks, including the theft of information from embassies and missions.
     
    "Among federal departments, Global Affairs Canada faces unique cyber threats and exfiltration of information risks due to the global nature of its operations," says the report.
     
    "The information technology system used to support Canada's international work is composed of 177 points of service in 109 countries. In several of these countries, departmental personnel operate in complex security environments that require a high degree of awareness to mitigate cyber threats and exfiltration of information risks."
     
    Overall, the report says, progress has been made with the completion of threat assessments at more than 170 missions to be completed by this fiscal year end in March.
     
    "However, given the evolving nature of threats abroad, efforts will continue to improve the security of Canada's international mission network," the departmental report says.
     
    "Almost 80 per cent of missions in the Middle East and Africa have identified and are actively managing security as one of their top three risks."
     
    The last Canadian diplomat to die in the line of duty was in 2013, when a 29-year-old woman was killed in Kenya during a terrorist attack on a Nairobi shopping mall that claimed the lives of dozens of people.
     
    In recent years, Canada closed its embassies in Syria, Libya and Iran because of security concerns.
     
    Dion said the government intends to make good on its commitment to re-open its Tehran embassy, and will make sure it is secure.
     
    "Everybody is in Iran except Canada, except the Americans. If the other G7 countries are able to be there and protect their people, Canada should do the same."
     
    The government has no time frame on re-establishing relations with Iran, saying it is complex process.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec's Top Court Rejects Lise Thibault Appeal; 18-Month Prison Term Stands

    Thibault, 76, was sentenced last fall to 18 months in jail for fraud and breach of trust.

    Quebec's Top Court Rejects Lise Thibault Appeal; 18-Month Prison Term Stands

    14-Year-Old Girl Faces 15 Charges After Multiple Stabbings At Ontario High School

    14-Year-Old Girl Faces 15 Charges After Multiple Stabbings At Ontario High School
    Durham Regional Police laid the charges 24 hours after the stabbing at Dunbarton High School in Pickering, Ont., which left seven people with non-serious injuries.

    14-Year-Old Girl Faces 15 Charges After Multiple Stabbings At Ontario High School

    Riley Dobson Of Guelph Identified As Teen Victim Of Fatal Hawaiian Chopper Crash

    Riley Dobson Of Guelph Identified As Teen Victim Of Fatal Hawaiian Chopper Crash
    He and three family members were aboard a tour helicopter when it crashed near the Pearl Harbor Visitors Center last Thursday.

    Riley Dobson Of Guelph Identified As Teen Victim Of Fatal Hawaiian Chopper Crash

    Foster Parents Lose Bid To Keep Metis Toddler In B.C.: Lawyer Files Appeal

    Foster Parents Lose Bid To Keep Metis Toddler In B.C.: Lawyer Files Appeal
    A British Columbia foster mother says she refuses to give up hope after losing a court battle to adopt a Metis toddler she has raised since birth.

    Foster Parents Lose Bid To Keep Metis Toddler In B.C.: Lawyer Files Appeal

    Judge Lays No Blame In Fatal Shooting Of Man By RCMP On Manitoba Reserve

    Judge Lays No Blame In Fatal Shooting Of Man By RCMP On Manitoba Reserve
    Judge Murray Thompson doesn't lay blame in the death of Paul Duck from the God's Lake Narrows First Nation and doesn't make any recommendations.

    Judge Lays No Blame In Fatal Shooting Of Man By RCMP On Manitoba Reserve

    National Carbon Tax Must Consider Regional Needs And Cost-Of-Living Hike: Yukon

    National Carbon Tax Must Consider Regional Needs And Cost-Of-Living Hike: Yukon
    Darrell Pasloski says his government is opposed to the levy because it would increase the cost of living and affect the competitiveness of territory's economy.

    National Carbon Tax Must Consider Regional Needs And Cost-Of-Living Hike: Yukon