Friday, July 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Terrorism Concerns Lead To Security Changes At Passport Offices

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Apr, 2017 12:50 PM
    OTTAWA — The federal government has been quietly making changes to passport offices in a bid to improve security and address concerns that the facilities could be easy targets for a terrorist attack.
     
    Civil servants in passport and other government offices have for years faced bomb threats, and hostility from individuals who are disgruntled, drunk or suffering mental illnesses.
     
    Internal government documents show that senior officials have more recently worried that someone with extremist views might see a passport office as prime target for an attack, particularly if the federal government revoked their passport privileges because they wanted to go abroad to join a terrorist group.
     
    The briefing note to senior officials at Employment and Social Development Canada says the offices could now more easily become targets, or be collateral damage.
     
    "ESDC Passport offices may be considered targets of symbolic value in future attacks," reads part of the 2015 briefing note marked, "Canadian Eyes Only."
     
    The Canadian Press obtained a copy of the documents under the Access to Information Act.
     
    Those concerns were stoked after two separate domestic terrorist attacks in October 2014.
     
    In the first case, Martin Couture-Rouleau hit two soldiers with his car at a strip mall just outside St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que., killing Warrant Officer Patrice Vincent, 53. Officials seized his passport that July after police prevented him from flying to Turkey.
     
    Michael Zehaf-Bibeau killed Cpl. Nathan Cirillo at the National War Memorial in Ottawa before storming Parliament Hill. He had come to Ottawa from Vancouver after he ran into problems getting a Canadian passport so he could travel to Libya.
     
    Both attackers were subsequently killed.
     
    The second incident prompted ESDC officials to call in the Mounties to review threats for every passport office in the country. Assessments were also carried out to see what could be done to the physical configuration of spaces, or the layout of services, to better protect the workers inside the office.
     
    The RCMP report from April 2015 concluded that the offices face terrorist and criminal threats, although nothing direct or immediate.
     
    A spokesman for ESDC, which oversees the 151 Service Canada offices that issue passports, said the department has and continues to make changes at existing and soon-to-be-opened facilities in response to the assessments.
     
    Along with physical changes to the offices to increase security there have been operational changes that federal officials hope will lower the risk of an attack. Among the measures was extending the passport renewal period to 10 years from five years and letting Canadians renew their passports online to reduce the number of people who had to go to an office.
     
    The chairman of the Senate's national security committee, which has studied terrorist threats to Canada, said that keeping passport offices secure has to be part of a larger conversation about how to keep people safe in public spaces. Conservative Sen. Daniel Lang said there are some 60 individuals in Canada who went abroad to join a terrorist group, and the country's spy agency is tracking 218 counter-terrorism targets in Canada.
     
    "Some of these individuals ... mean to cause significant harm and even mass murder," Lang said.
     
    "More must be done to secure public spaces including passport offices, Service Canada offices, airport entry areas, bus terminals, and rail stations from terrorist elements."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tom Mulcair Urges Supreme Court Reference To Test Legality Of Assisted Dying Law

    Tom Mulcair Urges Supreme Court Reference To Test Legality Of Assisted Dying Law
    Mulcair says he'll vote for the bill because he believes Parliament should meet the June 6 deadline set by the top court for enacting a new law.

    Tom Mulcair Urges Supreme Court Reference To Test Legality Of Assisted Dying Law

    Drug Haze Gone, Garbage Remains, But Vancouver's 4-20 Pot Event Trouble-Free

    Drug Haze Gone, Garbage Remains, But Vancouver's 4-20 Pot Event Trouble-Free
    A crowd estimated by police at about 20,000 crammed onto the beach Wednesday.

    Drug Haze Gone, Garbage Remains, But Vancouver's 4-20 Pot Event Trouble-Free

    Residents Near B.C. Wildfires Allowed To Return Home

    Residents Near B.C. Wildfires Allowed To Return Home
    Evacuation orders were lifted in three communities near Fort St. John, though residents in those areas and two others were warned that they should be ready to leave again at a moment's notice.

    Residents Near B.C. Wildfires Allowed To Return Home

    Judge Reserves Decision On Whether Accused Winnipeg Mail Bomber Should Get Bail

    Judge Reserves Decision On Whether Accused Winnipeg Mail Bomber Should Get Bail
    WINNIPEG — A judge has reserved decision on whether a Winnipeg man accused of sending letter bombs to his former wife and two lawyers should be granted bail.

    Judge Reserves Decision On Whether Accused Winnipeg Mail Bomber Should Get Bail

    Rachel Notley Bullish On NDP's Future Despite Party's Loss In Manitoba

    Rachel Notley Bullish On NDP's Future Despite Party's Loss In Manitoba
    "I like to see myself as not the last one standing but in fact the first in a new wave of NDP governments," said Notley in an interview Wednesday.

    Rachel Notley Bullish On NDP's Future Despite Party's Loss In Manitoba

    Accused In Bosma's Death 'Really Happy' After Hamilton Man Vanished: Trial Hears

    Accused In Bosma's Death 'Really Happy' After Hamilton Man Vanished: Trial Hears
    Marlena Meneses says her boyfriend, Mark Smich, had told her he was planning to steal a truck in the days leading up to May 6, 2013, when Bosma disappeared after taking two strangers for a test drive in his truck.

    Accused In Bosma's Death 'Really Happy' After Hamilton Man Vanished: Trial Hears