Monday, February 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Blair says Beijing visa applications secure

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Feb, 2021 09:47 PM
  • Blair says Beijing visa applications secure

Public Safety Minister Bill Blair says he assumes security authorities signed off on an arrangement to allow a company owned by a Chinese police force to run Canada's visa application centre in Beijing.

Blair says he can only make assumptions because the arrangement was put in place in 2008, under the previous Conservative government.

Still, he says he's been assured by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) that the personal information provided by visa applicants is secure.

He says the information is handled according to Canada's privacy laws, that no application or biometrically collected data is stored at the centre and that all databases containing personal information are located in Canada.

Opposition MPs questioned Blair about the possibility that visa applicants' personal information could be relayed to the Chinese government and cause negative repercussions, particularly for dissidents trying to flee the country's repressive Communist regime.

Bloc Quebecois MP Stephane Bergeron and New Democrat MP Jack Harris pressed Blair to explain which of Canada's national security agencies signed off on the subcontract to the Chinese police.

"I have some difficulty frankly answering your question Mr. Harris about the origins of this contract," Blair told the special committee on Canada-China relations Thursday.

"It was signed in 2008. So it's been in place for 12 years now and so its origin and who actually authorized this contract predates me or my government and frankly my knowledge."

Blair said there are "normal procurement processes" in place for contracting out services and he assumes they were followed in this case.

"I want to make sure that it's clear. I'm only able to make an assumption that those processes were in fact followed because it did take place 12 years ago."

"That's not much comfort, I have to say," Harris responded.

Blair acknowledged that IRCC is not a security agency but he said it does have an information technology specialist department that has provided assurances that the visa information is secure.

He said inspections and audits are regularly conducted to ensure there is no privacy breach of sensitive information and there has been no evidence of a problem.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

The latest COVID19 case numbers for BC

The latest COVID19 case numbers for BC
There were 465 new cases Tuesday from 11,781 completed tests, for a positivity rate of 3.9 per cent.

The latest COVID19 case numbers for BC

Concealing Cocaine in international shipments can be bananas: Kelowna RCMP

Concealing Cocaine in international shipments can be bananas: Kelowna RCMP
On February 24, 2019, a local Kelowna grocery store reported finding twelve large bricks of what they believed were illicit drugs in a recent shipment of bananas.

Concealing Cocaine in international shipments can be bananas: Kelowna RCMP

B.C. to get 5,800 fewer vaccine doses next week

B.C. to get 5,800 fewer vaccine doses next week
Adrian Dix says the province had expected to receive about 5,800 Pfizer-BioNTech doses, a relatively small amount compared with the roughly 25,000 it's supposed to receive the week after.

B.C. to get 5,800 fewer vaccine doses next week

Canadians eye US inauguration with relief, anxiety

Canadians eye US inauguration with relief, anxiety
Canadians have found themselves especially glued to American politics over the last four years since Trump was elected president of the United States.

Canadians eye US inauguration with relief, anxiety

Experts say Canada should share its vaccine wealth

Experts say Canada should share its vaccine wealth
David Hornsby, professor of international affairs at Carleton University, said the pandemic has shed light on an inward-looking trend that has been developing in the country for decades.

Experts say Canada should share its vaccine wealth

We'll keep pushing U.S. on Keystone XL: Trudeau

We'll keep pushing U.S. on Keystone XL: Trudeau
Environmental groups briefed on the incoming administration's plan also say they have been told it would come on Biden's first day in the White House.

We'll keep pushing U.S. on Keystone XL: Trudeau