Monday, June 22, 2026
ADVT 
National

Government's Re-tooled Anti-Terror Law To Be Introduced Friday, Says Stephen Harper

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jan, 2015 02:58 PM
    OTTAWA — The Conservative government's overhaul of anti-terrorism legislation will be introduced by the end of week and will make it crime to promote terrorism, Stephen Harper told party faithful on Sunday.
     
    The measures, which are also expected to give police greater ability to restrict the movements of purported extremists, will not be an assault on civil liberties, the prime minister said.  
     
    "These measures are designed to help authorities stop planned attacks, get threats off our streets, criminalize the promotion of terrorism, and prevent terrorists from travelling and recruiting others," Harper told a campaign-style event in the Ottawa-area. 
     
    "To be clear, in doing so, we shall be safeguarding our constitutional rights of speech, of association, of religion and all the rest."
     
    Restricting the movement of suspects radicals can be done by lowering the threshold for obtaining a peace bond, a federal source, who asked to remain anonymous, told The Canadian Press last week. 
     
    In addition, the government wants to retool Canada's no-fly list procedures to make it easier to stop a suspected terrorist from boarding an airplane.
     
     
    An internal federal review of last fall's deadly attacks on Canadian soldiers concluded there is a lack of suitable laws to crack down on radicals who openly encourage others to wage terrorism.
     
    Michael Zehaf Bibeau shot Cpl. Nathan Cirillo, an honour guard at the National War Memorial, before storming Parliament's Centre Block on Oct. 22. Zehaf Bibeau was gunned down outside the Library of Parliament.
     
    Two days earlier, a car driven by Martin Couture-Rouleau ran over and killed Warrant Officer Patrice Vincent in St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que., near Montreal. Police later shot and killed Couture-Rouleau when he advanced on officers with a knife.
     
    Harper repeated for the partisan crowd that violent jihadism had declared "war" on the west, but painted it as a much wider problem than just the Islamic State, which has overrun vast parts of Iraq and Syria. 
     
    "Jihadi terrorists are destabilizing large parts of the globe," Harper said. 
     
    "In Asia and Africa, an increasing number of territories are becoming ungoverned and under their influence, attacks and plots outside these regions are becoming ever more frequent and dangerous in Australia, in France, in Belgium just recently, and of course here."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Probe of RCAF chopper crash still not done

    Probe of RCAF chopper crash still not done
    TORONTO - More than three years after the crash of a military helicopter forced a halt to one of Canada's final combat missions in Afghanistan, investigators say they are nearing the end of their probe into what went wrong but still can't say when they will reveal the results.

    Probe of RCAF chopper crash still not done

    German President Happy Quebec Never Separated

    German President Happy Quebec Never Separated
      QUEBEC - A week after the Scottish referendum, Germany's president has created a minor stir in Quebec by remarking he's happy Quebec never separated from Canada.

    German President Happy Quebec Never Separated

    Modi Strikes Right Notes At Madison Square Garden, Announces Lifelong Visas For PIO Card Holders

    Modi Strikes Right Notes At Madison Square Garden, Announces Lifelong Visas For PIO Card Holders
    Addressing an around 20,000-strong gathering cheering Indian diaspora at Madison Square Garden, Modi said India is the youngest nation in the world and also the country with an ancient civilisation.

    Modi Strikes Right Notes At Madison Square Garden, Announces Lifelong Visas For PIO Card Holders

    Modi Supporters, Pro-Kashmir Secession Backers Face Off at UN Complex

    Modi Supporters, Pro-Kashmir Secession Backers Face Off at UN Complex
    More than 300 supporters of Prime Minister Narendra Modi turned up across the UN complex here Saturday to cheer him as he spoke to the General Assembly.

    Modi Supporters, Pro-Kashmir Secession Backers Face Off at UN Complex

    Alberta Announces New Measures On Floods

    Alberta Announces New Measures On Floods
    CALGARY - Premier Jim Prentice announced new measures Friday to clean up outstanding claims from last year's disastrous southern Alberta floods, and to prevent them from happening again.

    Alberta Announces New Measures On Floods

    Canada can't sit idle against ISIL: Stephen Harper

    Canada can't sit idle against ISIL: Stephen Harper
    OTTAWA - Prime Minister Stephen Harper, his spokesman in Parliament and even the U.S. ambassador reached out Friday to clarify whether Canada will expand its role in the battle against Islamic militants in the Middle East.

    Canada can't sit idle against ISIL: Stephen Harper