Monday, December 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Tax data suggests lethal Canadian arms still being exported to Israel

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jul, 2025 05:32 PM
  • Tax data suggests lethal Canadian arms still being exported to Israel

Israeli customs data suggests lethal Canadian arms are still being exported regularly to Israel, despite Ottawa's claim that it has halted such shipments.

"Canadian military products are deeply embedded in Israel's military infrastructure, despite our government's attempts to placate us," said Rachel Small of the group World Beyond War.

Her group is part of a coalition of Canadian advocates for Palestinians which released a report Tuesday based on data published by the Israel Tax Authority.

The data shows shipments from Canada that Israeli authorities classified as bullets, guns and other weapons.

The Canadian Press has reviewed the publicly available data sets, which include a shipment this past April listed as "bullets" sent from Canada to Israel with the "quantity" listed as 175,000, under the customs code that Israel uses for "munitions of war and parts thereof."

Similar bullet shipments from Canada arrived in Israel in February, July and December of 2024.

Also this April, a Canadian shipment arrived in Israel that a customs agent recorded under the category of "tanks and other armoured fighting vehicles, motorized, whether or not fitted with weapons, and parts of such vehicles."

The tax database says that in August and November 2024, firearm "parts and accessories" were shipped from Canada to Israel which could qualify as "arms and ammunition." The database says they could include "military weapons" but could also be non-military items such as sporting shotguns or truncheons.

In the report released Tuesday, activists point to other shipments to Israel classified as aircraft parts, lasers, cameras and "transmission apparatus" that they say could have been for military use.

Global Affairs Canada and the office of Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand have yet to provide comment on the report. The Israeli embassy in Ottawa has been invited to comment but has not yet responded.

"We see clearly now that Canadian-made military goods have continued to flow directly to Israel this entire time, directly supporting Israel's capacity to carry out war crimes in Gaza and maintain its occupation of Palestine," Small said.

Parliament voted in favour of a non-binding motion in March 2024 to halt new arms permits for Israel, and the government subsequently announced a review of existing export permits.

That month, the office of then-foreign affairs minister Mélanie Joly said that none of the operating permits allowed for the export of "lethal goods" to Israel.

Yara Shoufani of the Palestinian Youth Movement said the Canadian government has not been transparent about what's reaching Israel, and she wonders if the federal government misled Parliament.

"Despite deceptive government statements, the flow of military cargo from Canada to Israel has been uninterrupted," she said at a news conference on Parliament Hill on Tuesday.

She said the government should implement a two-ways arms embargo, instead of continuing "to arm Israel and mislead the public with vague statements about permit regulations."

The report also raises the question of whether Ottawa has upheld a commitment Joly made in September 2024 to bar Canadian-made weapons from reaching the Gaza Strip.

The report notes specific companies receiving Canadian arms that have been equipping Israel's offensive in Gaza, and the possibility that aircraft parts from Canada have been used in strikes on Gaza. There is no direct, explicit evidence in the report that Canadian arms have been used on the ground in Gaza.

NDP foreign affairs critic Heather McPherson said the government has broken its promise to halt arms transfers to Israel.

“Today’s report shows that the Liberals misled Canadians instead of taking meaningful action to stop the violence and starvation killing Palestinian civilians," she wrote in a statement.

McPherson argued Canada is exposing itself to international liability for not taking action to deter Israel from actions that the International Court of Justice could end up classifying as genocide.

"Canadians are right to feel betrayed and horrified,” McPherson wrote.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

MORE National ARTICLES

Premier criticizes report that says Alberta hindered efforts to fight Jasper fire

Premier criticizes report that says Alberta hindered efforts to fight Jasper fire
“It is disheartening to see a report and the media response to that report that so clearly overlooks the substantial, coordinated efforts undertaken by the Alberta government during the Jasper wildfire,” Smith wrote Friday on social media.

Premier criticizes report that says Alberta hindered efforts to fight Jasper fire

Derailment in Abbotsford, B.C., closes road near Sumas border

Derailment in Abbotsford, B.C., closes road near Sumas border
The department says in a post to social media that the road is blocked off between West Railway to the commercial vehicle entrance for the Sumas border crossing.

Derailment in Abbotsford, B.C., closes road near Sumas border

Alberta serial romance scammer fights court ruling keeping him in prison indefinitely

Alberta serial romance scammer fights court ruling keeping him in prison indefinitely
Jeffrey Kent's lawyer says he has filed a notice of appeal challenging the recent ruling by an Edmonton Court of King’s Bench judge to designate his client a dangerous offender.

Alberta serial romance scammer fights court ruling keeping him in prison indefinitely

Carney to hold talks with Inuit leaders on major projects bill in N.W.T. next week

Carney to hold talks with Inuit leaders on major projects bill in N.W.T. next week
Some chiefs walked out of the meeting of the summit saying they saw an insufficient response to concerns they'd been raising for weeks, while others left the meeting "cautiously optimistic."

Carney to hold talks with Inuit leaders on major projects bill in N.W.T. next week

Report says Alberta government created command challenges fighting Jasper wildfire

Report says Alberta government created command challenges fighting Jasper wildfire
The report was commissioned by the town and surveyed participants and firefighters who battled the wind-whipped blaze that destroyed a third of buildings in the community located in Jasper National Park.

Report says Alberta government created command challenges fighting Jasper wildfire

B.C. Premier David Eby leans on Ravi Kahlon again as he reshuffles cabinet

B.C. Premier David Eby leans on Ravi Kahlon again as he reshuffles cabinet
When Eby created the province's stand-alone housing ministry in 2022, he asked Kahlon to head it, and when U.S. President Donald Trump launched his trade war on Canada this year, it was Kahlon who Eby picked to chair the cabinet committee on B.C.'s response.

B.C. Premier David Eby leans on Ravi Kahlon again as he reshuffles cabinet