Harper extending personal control to oversight of national security and intelligence gathering
The Cabinet Committee on National Security will provide "broad strategic direction for security and foreign policy related to Canada's national interest, and [oversee] Canada's national security response activities," its description in background notes says.
The new panel includes Public Safety Minister Vic Toews (Provencher, Man.), responsible for CSIS and RCMP intelligence gathering, as vice-chair.
Other members are Justice Minister Rob Nicholson (Niagara Falls, Ont.), also attorney general and responsible for other intelligence aspects of policing, security and prosecutions; Defence Minister Peter MacKay (Central Nova, N.S.), who is directly responsible for the government's main electronic eavesdropping and intelligence system, the Communications Security Establishment, and also is responsible for defence department intelligence services; International Cooperation Minister Bev Oda (Durham, Ont.), responsible for foreign aid delivery through the Canadian International Development Agency; newly appointed Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird (Ottawa West-Nepean, Ont.); Immigration Minister Jason Kenney (Calgary Southeast, Alta.), whose department routinely gathers sensitive information abroad and, in its immigration screening, potentially valuable intelligence; and newly appointed Transport Minister Denis Lebel (Roberval-Lac-Saint-Jean, Que.), whose department is responsible for a range of entry points to Canada, as well as intelligence and information gathering.
The Opposition is not invited. This is a GOVERNMENT Committee, not a Parliamentary Committee. That way, for example, it's easier to criminalize those who politically disagree with this sinister regime.
First Nations under Surveillance by Harper regime.
Information obtained by Access to Information requests reveals that almost immediately upon taking power in 2006, the Department of Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC) was given the lead role to spy on First Nations. The goal was to identify the First Nation leaders, participants and outside supporters of First Nation occupations and protests, and to closely monitor their actions.