Wednesday, May 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trudeau has 'confidence' in RCMP to investigate Canadian extremist travellers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Jun, 2019 06:29 PM

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government has confidence in the RCMP to investigate Canadians who travelled to fight alongside extremists in Iraq and Syria.

    Speaking in France following a D-Day anniversary ceremony, Trudeau said the Mounties and intelligence agencies in Canada and abroad face the difficult challenge of presenting the information they gather in court as evidence of crimes.

    Trudeau says the government is ensuring Canadian agencies have the necessary resources and opportunities to collaborate with foreign allies on such cases.

    The latest annual federal report on extremism says some 190 people with connections to Canada are suspected of terrorist activity abroad and, in addition, approximately 60 have returned.

    The activities of these Canadians in various countries could involve front-line fighting, training, logistical support, fundraising or studying at extremist-influenced schools.

    A small number of the 60 returnees have come back from Turkey, Iraq or Syria, and many who went abroad now lack valid travel documents, find themselves on a no-fly list or fear being arrested on Canadian soil.

    "We fully respect the role of the RCMP to make determinations independently on how it will proceed with prosecutions with its approach in various investigations. We have confidence in the RCMP," Trudeau said.

    "One of the challenges when it comes to international issues of this sort is always making the translation from intelligence-gathering activities to presenting evidence of crimes," he added. "That is something that the RCMP, our intelligence agencies, and indeed agencies around the world, are struggling with and working on very hard."

    The RCMP says relationships with foreign police are fundamental to Canada's ability to deal with extremist travellers.

    "While our ultimate goal is criminal prosecution, we look at every tool at our disposal to disrupt the threat," said Cpl. Caroline Duval, an RCMP spokeswoman.

    Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale has stressed that Canadians who travelled to join overseas extremists chose to abandon the democratic advantages of Canada in favour of pursuing terrorist activities.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police should be part of mental health strategy: B.C. death review panel

    Police should be part of mental health strategy: B.C. death review panel
    The aim of the review is to determine how deaths in similar circumstances could be prevented.

    Police should be part of mental health strategy: B.C. death review panel

    Search suspended for Calgary man swept away in fast-moving B.C. river

    Search suspended for Calgary man swept away in fast-moving B.C. river
    Cpl. Madonna Saunderson says jet boats and aircraft had been assisting searchers who were on the ground.

    Search suspended for Calgary man swept away in fast-moving B.C. river

    Penticton, B.C., approves ban on sitting, lying, on some downtown sidewalks

    Penticton, B.C., approves ban on sitting, lying, on some downtown sidewalks
    Penticton council voted 5-2 to approve an amendment to the Good Neighbourhood Bylaw, giving police and bylaw officers the power to hand out $100 fines.

    Penticton, B.C., approves ban on sitting, lying, on some downtown sidewalks

    Department of Fisheries to test for harmful virus at B.C. fish farms

    Department of Fisheries to test for harmful virus at B.C. fish farms
    Jonathan Wilkinson said the screening for Icelandic and Norwegian strains of piscine orthoreovirus, or PRV, at B.C. aquaculture sites is part of a proposed risk management policy that aims to protect wild salmon and the health of farmed fish.

    Department of Fisheries to test for harmful virus at B.C. fish farms

    Trudeau says carbon tax can help deal with extreme weather, Alberta fires

    Trudeau said Canadians are seeing the impact of climate change with an increase in wildfires in Western Canada, recent tornadoes in Ottawa and flooding across the country this spring.

    Trudeau says carbon tax can help deal with extreme weather, Alberta fires

    Alberta makes it official: Bill passed and proclaimed to kill carbon tax

    The province stopped charging the tax last week

    Alberta makes it official: Bill passed and proclaimed to kill carbon tax