Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale Says Report On Terror Threats Unintentionally 'Maligned' Certain Communities

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Apr, 2019 08:24 PM

    OTTAWA — Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says future reports on terrorist threats to Canada will not refer to Sikh extremism and instead use "extremists who support violent means to establish an independent state within India."


    Goodale says the language used in his department's 2018 terror-threat report "unintentionally maligned" certain communities and is not in keeping with Canadian values.


    But Goodale isn't going to change the language in the existing document, which drew ire from Canada's Sikh community, nor has he provided public evidence backing up the decision to include Sikh extremism in the annual report for the first time.


    Balpreet Singh Boparai, the lawyer for the World Sikh Organization in Canada, says admitting the language was wrong and fixing it in the next report is a small step forward, but questioned why the existing report wouldn't be revised.


    He also said Goodale is missing the wider concern that the government has provided no evidence of extremist threats among any Canadians who want to have an independent Sikh state within India, known as Khalistan.


    The House of Commons public-safety committee voted this week to summon Goodale to appear sometime before the end of June to discuss the concerns about the report.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Charged With Attempted Murder In Transit Officer Shooting In Metro Vancouver

    Mounties say charges have been laid in the shooting of a Metro Vancouver Transit Police officer on a SkyTrain platform last month.  

    Man Charged With Attempted Murder In Transit Officer Shooting In Metro Vancouver

    South Coast B.C. Snow Storm Passes On, But Many Areas Still Digging Out

    South Coast B.C. Snow Storm Passes On, But Many Areas Still Digging Out
    Environment Canada has lifted snowfall warnings for British Columbia's south coast, but conditions are still treacherous in some areas and frigid temperatures persist in parts of the province.

    South Coast B.C. Snow Storm Passes On, But Many Areas Still Digging Out

    Here Comes Novel Device Equally Harmful As Traditional Smoking, E-Cigarettes

    Here Comes Novel Device Equally Harmful As Traditional Smoking, E-Cigarettes
    The study has compared new heated tobacco devices, which heat solid tobacco instead of an e-liquid, with vaping and traditional cigarettes showing that all the three are toxic to the cells.    

    Here Comes Novel Device Equally Harmful As Traditional Smoking, E-Cigarettes

    Privacy Commissioner Finds Doctors Snooped In Humboldt Broncos Patient Records

    Sixteen people were killed and 13 were injured in the crash between the junior hockey team's bus and a semi trailer at a rural Saskatchewan intersection.

    Privacy Commissioner Finds Doctors Snooped In Humboldt Broncos Patient Records

    Do Not Disturb: Calgary Zoo Wildlife Centre Aims To Save Endangered Species

    Do Not Disturb: Calgary Zoo Wildlife Centre Aims To Save Endangered Species
    CALGARY — A narrow, snow-covered gravel road winds its way to a hidden gate that opens to a parcel of land on the southern tip of Calgary.    

    Do Not Disturb: Calgary Zoo Wildlife Centre Aims To Save Endangered Species

    Man Accused Of Killing Ailing Wife Wasn't Suffering From Major Depression: Expert

    MONTREAL — A Crown expert says a Montreal man on trial for second-degree murder showed no evidence of major depression at the time his severely ill wife was killed.

    Man Accused Of Killing Ailing Wife Wasn't Suffering From Major Depression: Expert