Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Charities Directorate Flags Suspected Terrorist Financing Cases For Senators

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Apr, 2016 12:18 PM
  • Charities Directorate Flags Suspected Terrorist Financing Cases For Senators
OTTAWA — Federal revenue agency officials have handed senators detailed correspondence about six organizations whose charitable status was stripped over concerns about terrorist financing.
 
But the agency stresses that the fight against shady funding of political extremism begins with prevention — revocation being just one weapon in its arsenal.
 
The Senate defence and security committee has been pressing the revenue agency's charities directorate to provide the information since June of last year, but the federal election delayed the effort.
 
The pages cover the handful of cases since 2008 in which revocations involved concerns about terrorist financing. 
 
Basic information about each case — including the World Assembly of Muslim Youth, the Canadian Foundation for Tamil Refugee Rehabilitation and the World Islamic Call Society — has already been made public.
 
But the various files — presented by directorate officials who testified before the committee — lay out details of the federal concerns.
 
The committee meeting Monday came amid growing concern about the surreptitious movement of large sums around the globe for illicit purposes.
 
The charities directorate says it turns down applications for charitable registration where terrorist financing risks arise.
 
The directorate also conducts audits of registered charities based on the risk and can take action ranging from education letters and compliance agreements to sanctions and revocation of charitable status.
 
In addition, it can also pass information about suspected criminal or security-related matters to police and intelligence partners. 
 
Alastair Bland, director of the review and analysis division of the charities directorate, said there is a "recognized threat" against the Canadian charitable sector from people determined to support terrorism.
 
The audit materials provided to the committee should give senators a sense of the complexity of the revenue agency's work, said Cathy Hawara, director general of the charities directorate.
 
She cautioned that the Income Tax Act restricts officials to discussing only cases that end in revocation, meaning she had to be careful about referring to ongoing investigations.
 
"We continue to identify risks and we take the appropriate action," Hawara said.

MORE National ARTICLES

CBC TV Show Gets Man New Crack At Lawsuit Against Job-promising Agency

CBC TV Show Gets Man New Crack At Lawsuit Against Job-promising Agency
In what the Appeal Court called "most unusual" circumstances, the justices said a lower court was wrong to deny Golam Mehedi a chance to reopen his case given the post-trial broadcast.

CBC TV Show Gets Man New Crack At Lawsuit Against Job-promising Agency

Crash Complicates Canadian Tour Of Country Singer Jason Aldean

Crash Complicates Canadian Tour Of Country Singer Jason Aldean
Aldean's 2015 Burn It Down tour played in Kamloops, B.C., on Monday night and was headed to a Tuesday performance in Prince George, when all those cliches about trucks, dirt roads and disaster played out.

Crash Complicates Canadian Tour Of Country Singer Jason Aldean

Underground Lab In Nickel Mine In Sudbury, Ont., Probes Mysterious Neutrinos

Underground Lab In Nickel Mine In Sudbury, Ont., Probes Mysterious Neutrinos
It's called SNOLAB, a cavernous "clean" lab that was able to detect minuscule particles known as neutrinos. 

Underground Lab In Nickel Mine In Sudbury, Ont., Probes Mysterious Neutrinos

Four Indo-Canadians In Top Civic Firm's Fellowship

Four Indo-Canadians In Top Civic Firm's Fellowship
The four Indians are Anita Abraham, Ritesh Kotak, Mrinalini Menon and Pam Sethi.

Four Indo-Canadians In Top Civic Firm's Fellowship

Nova Scotia Man's Double Murder Trial Hears From Gunman In January 2010 Slayings

Nova Scotia Man's Double Murder Trial Hears From Gunman In January 2010 Slayings
Leslie Greenwood is accused of being the getaway driver in slayings in which another Nova Scotia man, Robert Simpson, has admitted to being the killer.

Nova Scotia Man's Double Murder Trial Hears From Gunman In January 2010 Slayings

Buffalo Roams On Highway West Of Toronto, Dies After Crashing Into 2 Cars

Buffalo Roams On Highway West Of Toronto, Dies After Crashing Into 2 Cars
Police say three buffaloes got loose from a nearby farm and one made its way onto the QEW around 6 a.m. in Niagara Falls, Ont.

Buffalo Roams On Highway West Of Toronto, Dies After Crashing Into 2 Cars