C-36 Anti-terrorism Legislation – Report Stage
Monday November 26, 2001
Mr. Bill Blaikie (Winnipeg--Transcona, NDP): Mr.
Speaker, I listened with care to the hon. leader of the Progressive
Conservative Party and I was struck by the strong language that he used. He
described Bill C-36 as an assault on civil liberties. He compared it to the War
Measures Act. He said it was an assault on civil liberty comparable to the War
Measures Act which must be stopped.
I say this only because I encourage the leader of
the Conservative Party, if that is his view of the bill and assuming his
amendments do not pass, to join with the NDP in opposing Bill C-36 and perhaps
members of the Bloc Quebecois because they seem to be changing their minds as
well with respect to how they voted on second reading of the bill.
I know the leader of the Conservative Party was not
here when the War Measures Act was introduced in the House. I believe he was
elected in 1972. However his party was here at the time and so perhaps collectively
they could learn from history and not want to be in the position they are in
now of looking back on the War Measures Act in a critical way and presumably
regretting that they supported it at the time.
Instead of repeating the mistake and voting for the
bill and 20 years from now hearing some future leader of the Conservative
Party, because I think the Conservative Party will outlast the various
machinations going on here, reflect on the passage of Bill C-36 in 2001 and
speak with regret about the position that was taken, let us have the vote on
third reading reflect the language of the leader of the Conservative Party that
the bill is an assault on civil liberties comparable to the War Measures Act,
his language not mine, and something which must be stopped.
With respect to the amendments we are discussing and
in an attempt to be more specifically relevant to what we have before us, we
support the amendments moved by the hon. member from the Alliance and the
leader of the Conservative Party.
We had concerns of our own which we expressed in
committee about the definition of terrorist activity and the clause the hon.
member from the Alliance seeks to eliminate. We voted with the Alliance in
committee to try to remove that aspect of the definition of terrorist activity.
We expressed other concerns in terms of amendments
and in terms of voting against the whole of clause 4 which sets out the
definition of terrorist activity because we share the concerns of the Bloc and
others that the definition of terrorist activity is too broad and may well
include legitimate dissent despite the exemptions built into the definition.
We shared concerns about the listing of entities and
concerns similar to those expressed by the leader of the Conservative Party.
That is why we moved amendments in committee having to do with listed entities.
Finally, although it comes a bit later, one of the
reasons we were concerned about the definition of terrorist activity is that we
could see the government was not going to sunset that aspect of the bill. The
government did sunset, to the extent that we can call it a sunset, the clauses
having to do with preventive arrest and investigative hearings.
I do not know if members were in northern Canada
toward the end of June, perhaps on a canoe trip or fishing. One can go canoeing
or fish until 1.30 or 2 a.m. The sun never sets. The fishing trip I went on
near Yellowknife in the 1980s reminds me of the Liberals' sunset clause. The
sun never really goes down under the horizon. It just dips a little and then
picks right up again. That is what we have in this bill.
We do not really have a sunset clause. The sun would
never really go down. The government would not have to reintroduce the
legislation. It would not have to consider whether or not the legislation was
adequate or amend or change it in any way. It would just ram a motion through
both houses of parliament, extend it for another five years and perhaps another
five years after that. It is for that reason we find the sunsetting provisions
in the bill to be both a misnomer and inadequate.
As far as the grouping of amendments we have before
us which were moved by an Alliance member and the leader of the Conservative
Party, we support them. They are in keeping with what we supported in
committee.