Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

Think carefully before ushering in new anti-terror measures: expert

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Oct, 2014 11:39 AM

    OTTAWA - A national security expert is urging the Harper government to reflect calmly on the shooting incident in Ottawa before changing counter-terrorism laws.

    Wesley Wark, who teaches at the University of Ottawa, says the key question is whether the security laws passed after the 9-11 terrorist attacks have served Canada well.

    Wark says only once there are answers should the government consider changes to resources, organizations or laws.

    Otherwise, he warns, officials will just be flailing in panic — something he would like to think is un-Canadian.

    The Conservatives were already poised to introduce changes to the law governing Canada's spy service when a gunman fatally shot a soldier Wednesday at the National War Memorial before storming Parliament Hill.

    The proposed amendments — Harper told the House of Commons today they would be "expedited" — would give the Canadian Security Intelligence Service more power to track terror suspects abroad and provide blanket identity protection for the agency's human sources.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver police believe Molotov-cocktail attacks linked to gang conflict

    Vancouver police believe Molotov-cocktail attacks linked to gang conflict
    Police are investigating a series of Molotov cocktail attacks they believe are related to a gang conflict in Vancouver.

    Vancouver police believe Molotov-cocktail attacks linked to gang conflict

    Five BC residents including Thalbinder Singh Poonian engaged in $7M stock manipulation

    Five BC residents including Thalbinder Singh Poonian engaged in $7M stock manipulation
    British Columbia's securities regulator has found that five B.C. residents manipulated the stock price of a company that traded on the TSX Venture Exchange in a scheme that netted about $7 million and left investors holding worthless shares.

    Five BC residents including Thalbinder Singh Poonian engaged in $7M stock manipulation

    Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation

    Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation
    Nine unions have banded together in British Columbia to offer $8 million in interest-free loans to the province's striking teachers while the nurses' union is donating half a million dollars.

    Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation

    We're not the company that 'only hires white men', says firm receiving hate mail

    We're not the company that 'only hires white men', says firm receiving hate mail
    An Ottawa-area business says it's getting abusive emails from people who think it's the same company that Ontario's Human Rights Tribunal ruled discriminated against a foreign-born job applicant by telling him it "only hires white men.''

    We're not the company that 'only hires white men', says firm receiving hate mail

    Striking Teachers Get A Helping Hand From B.C.'s Labour Movement

    Striking Teachers Get A Helping Hand From B.C.'s Labour Movement
    Labour leaders in British Columbia are expected to announce later today financial aid for the province's striking teachers, who will themselves take a vote on binding arbitration.

    Striking Teachers Get A Helping Hand From B.C.'s Labour Movement

    Survey findings on youth smoking points to need for flavoured tobacco ban

    Survey findings on youth smoking points to need for flavoured tobacco ban
    The Canadian Cancer Society says a new national survey points to the need to ban flavoured tobacco products.

    Survey findings on youth smoking points to need for flavoured tobacco ban