Terry Glavin: Carney should hold human-rights violators accountable

1 hour ago 17

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Rather than the rumpus arising from Canada’s interference in Saudi affairs, it was the other way around.

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It wasn’t just that the Saudis had long been bankrolling religious institutions in Canada to propagandize the austere Salafist wing of Islam and bully Canadian Muslims into keeping their traps shut about the excesses of the kingdom’s thousands of jet-setting “princes.”

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At the time, bin Salman himself was also demanding that Canada extradite the senior Saudi intelligence official Saad Aljabri, who had fled for his life and found refuge in Canada ahead of the diplomatic rupture. Aljabri’s transgression was that his patron had been another prince, bin Salman’s rival, the deposed Mohammed bin Nayef.

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Bin Salman had imprisoned Aljabri’s sons, effectively taking them hostage, and his efforts to lure Aljabri back to Saudi Arabia mirrored his entreaties to the Washington Post columnist, Saudi dissident and author Jamal Khashoggi, who refused to return and ended up murdered on bin Salman’s orders in the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul in October 2018.

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In a civil suit filed in a U.S. court in 2020, Aljabri claimed that agents from the same unit that murdered and dismembered Khashoggi with a bone saw in Istanbul had been dispatched to Canada to kill him, but the would-be assassins had been turned away by suspicious Canada customs officials at the border.

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This brings us to the question: what, then, if even “lecturing countries from afar” is too stern a standpoint for Canada to adopt in such matters, should Canada do?

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Back in 2020, responding to the disturbing claims in Aljabri’s lawsuit, Public Safety Minister Bill Blair said all the right things. It was unacceptable for foreign actors to threaten anyone living in Canada. “Canadians can be confident that our security agencies have the skills and resources necessary to detect, investigate and respond to such threats,” he said. But Canadians still have no cause to be confident.

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There’s a lot that Ottawa could be doing. The Liberal government has been promising a new national security strategy since 2004, and there still isn’t even a national clearing house among and between Canada’s various intelligence and law-enforcement agencies to handle cases of transnational repression.

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After several years of scandals and shocking leaks to the news media about Beijing’s deep reach into Canada’s politics from frustrated intelligence-agency officials, an untested foreign influence registry is only now beginning operations. But in January, the RCMP was conscripted by Carney to collaborate with Beijing’s dreaded Ministry of Public Security, the source of several overseas intimidation rackets. The MOU setting out the collaboration remains a secret document.

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Uyghur, Tibetan and Hongkonger activists are increasingly going silent for fear of their relatives being persecuted back home. The extraterritorial reach of Beijing’s National Security Law and its recently promulgated “ethnic unity” law means that travel to any country that has concluded an extradition treaty with China will run the risk of arrest and extradition to face criminal charges back in China.

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Instances of Russian hacking and cyber-sabotage have become commonplace. On Tuesday the Macdonald-Laurier Institute — one of Moscow’s favourite Canadian targets — learned that its entire website had been replicated online. The mock site is believed to be an operation of the type the Five Eyes intelligence services have lately warned about: an effort to procure sensitive or even classified information from unsuspecting Canadian sources.

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Iranian dissidents say they live in fear of the Khomeinist regime’s agents here in Canada, and just this week, the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensics Research Lab released a report about a major surveillance and intimidation operation targeting Belarusian exiles in Canada. Run by the Lukashenko regime in Belarus, Moscow’s primary front-line client state, the operation identifies Belarusian democracy activists in Canada and then goes after their family members and their properties in Belarus.

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