Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Tories end boycott of national security committee

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Feb, 2022 05:03 PM
  • Tories end boycott of national security committee

OTTAWA - The federal Conservatives are ending their boycott of a special national security and intelligence committee made up of MPs and senators.

Interim Conservative leader Candice Bergen announced the reversal on Tuesday, saying she was writing to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to have Tory MPs Michelle Rempel Garner and Rob Morrison appointed to the committee.

"I believe it’s important for Conservatives to have a voice and presence on the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians (NSICOP) during these historic times," Bergen said in a statement.

Bergen also moved to shake up the official Opposition’s critic portfolios, with former cabinet minister Ed Fast taking over as the Conservatives' point person on finance after Pierre Poilievre stepped down to run for the party leadership.

The decision to end the NSICOP boycott comes two months after then-Conservative leader Erin O'Toole said Conservatives were boycotting the all-party committee, which was created in 2017 to review sensitive matters.

O'Toole said the boycott was to protest the Liberal government’s refusal to hand over unredacted documents related to the firing of two scientists from Canada’s highest security laboratory in Winnipeg.

Bergen on Tuesday said Conservatives would continue "demanding answers and documents related to the national microbiology lab in Winnipeg," while also pushing to make the committee more accountable to Parliament.

Opposition parties banded together last spring to order the Public Health Agency of Canada to hand over the documents to the now-defunct special committee on Canada-China relations.

The Liberal government gave them to NSICOP instead, arguing that it was the more appropriate body to review sensitive material that could jeopardize national security.

That committee submits classified reports to the prime minister, which are later tabled in Parliament in edited form. Its members must have top security clearance and are bound to secrecy.

At the time, House of Commons Speaker Anthony Rota ruled that NSICOP is not a committee of Parliament and, therefore, not an acceptable alternative to having a Commons committee examine the documents.

In a December letter, O’Toole alleged NSICOP had “become a committee of the Prime Minister’s Office” and has been used by Trudeau’s government “to avoid accountability and that is diminishing its credibility.”

He said changes were required to the legislation creating the committee to establish it as a standing Commons committee that reports to Parliament, not the prime minister.

PHAC has said the matter of the scientists’ firing is related to “a possible breach of security protocols” and is under police investigation.

The opposition believes the documents they’ve demanded will show why Xiangguo Qiu and her husband Keding Cheng were escorted out of Winnipeg’s National Microbiology Laboratory in July 2019 and subsequently fired in January 2021.

They also want to see documents related to the transfer, overseen by Qiu, of deadly Ebola and Henipah viruses to China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology in March 2019.

Former PHAC president Iain Stewart had assured MPs the transfer had nothing to do with the subsequent firings of Qiu and her husband and that there was no connection to COVID-19, which first appeared in China’s Wuhan province.

Opposition parties continue to suspect a link despite those assurances.

MORE National ARTICLES

3,287 COVID19 cases over 3 days

3,287 COVID19 cases over 3 days
There are 23,739 active cases of COVID-19 in the province, and 306,419 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 987 COVID-positive individuals are in hospital and 141 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.    

3,287 COVID19 cases over 3 days

Suspicious device at Surrey Memorial Hospital deemed not explosive

Suspicious device at Surrey Memorial Hospital deemed not explosive
The Explosive Disposal Unit (EDU) was consulted and Care and Treatment Zone area of the hospital was evacuated. The Lower Mainland Integrated Police Dog Service attended and conducted a full sweep of surrounding areas.

Suspicious device at Surrey Memorial Hospital deemed not explosive

VPD re-arrests woman for second stranger attack in four days

VPD re-arrests woman for second stranger attack in four days
VPD officers were on patrol when they spotted the suspect randomly kicking and punching people as she walked near Main Street and National Avenue on Saturday afternoon. 

VPD re-arrests woman for second stranger attack in four days

Federal ministers to address Ottawa protest

Federal ministers to address Ottawa protest
Amid blaring truck horns, the demonstration has included open fires, makeshift feeding stations, encampments and numerous — sometimes profane — anti-government signs.

Federal ministers to address Ottawa protest

Help for farmers being announced after B.C. floods

Help for farmers being announced after B.C. floods
Record rains combined with overflowing rivers in mid-November swamped farmland in several areas of southern B.C. and Vancouver Island. In the Sumas Prairie, a prime agricultural area in Abbotsford, water flooded barns, fields and homes.

Help for farmers being announced after B.C. floods

Kevin Falcon wins B.C. Liberal leadership race

Kevin Falcon wins B.C. Liberal leadership race
Falcon won on the fifth ballot, taking just over 52 per cent of the points available in a sometimes fractious leadership race where the former minister appeared to be the focus of attacks as the perceived front-runner.

Kevin Falcon wins B.C. Liberal leadership race