Skip to main content

PM says civil liberties must be balanced with security in battling terrorism

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during an official visit to Ukraine on July 12, 2016. File photo by The Canadian Press.

An alleged terrorist plot in Ontario that created anxieties over police monitoring of suspects hasn’t shaken Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s emphasis on balancing civil liberties with public safety.

In his first reaction to an alleged plot that led to the death of Aaron Driver in Strathroy, Ont., Trudeau said Tuesday that balancing individual rights with keeping Canadians secure from bombing threats has to be handled with care.

"Canada is a country that values its freedom (and) its basic charter rights," he said during a stop in Bridgetown, N.S., for an infrastructure funding announcement.

"All Canadians expect their government to do two things: to keep Canadians safe and to defend and uphold the values and rights that all Canadians hold dear."

"Getting that balance right isn’t always easy in the challenging situation we now live in but it’s extremely important."

Last week, the RCMP fielded media questions about why it was the FBI and not the Mounties who discovered a video that led them to Driver, who police said had threatened to detonate an explosive in an urban centre.

Driver died Wednesday night after a confrontation with police that saw a bomb detonated in a taxi cab.

Trudeau said to applause from about 300 people gathered along the tranquil Annapolis River that he congratulates the security services and police for "having managed to prevent any serious incidents related to this particular individual."

"It is something we continue to work very, very hard on to keep Canadians safe in their homes and communities right across this country."

The prime minister mentioned the continuing presence of Canada’s special forces in northern Iraq, where they are assisting in the war against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

He said the wider response against domestic terrorism will be rolled out by Public Security Minister Ralph Goodale as the Liberals continue plans to reform former prime minister Stephen Harper’s Bill C−51.

During the last federal election, the Liberals pledged to guarantee that all Canadian Security Intelligence Service warrants respect the charter, that the right to lawful protests and advocacy aren’t violated, and they pledged to "narrow overly broad definitions (in Bill C−51), such as defining ’terrorist propaganda’ more clearly."

They also said a Liberal government would limit the Communications Security Establishment’s powers by requiring a warrant to engage in the surveillance of Canadians and emphasize community outreach to battle radicalization of youths.

Asked if the reforms are being revisited in light of cases like Driver’s, Trudeau said the Liberals plan to create an all−party committee of parliamentarians to oversee national security agencies.

He said the committee will ensure the agencies "don’t go too far and violate our fundamental rights and freedoms when they work hard to keep us safe."

"But at the same time, oversight will ensure that our intelligence and security agencies do everything necessary to keep Canadians safe," said Trudeau.

"This situation of last week and situations like it will be exactly the kind of thing I expect this committee of parliamentarians to weigh in on and advise how we can do an even better job of keeping Canadians safe, like we were able to do last week."

Comments