Canada: C-51 A 'Fascist And Dictatorial Piece Of
Legislation'
By Ryan Maloney
June 06,
2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "HP"
- The constitutional lawyer who torpedoed Stephen Harper's pick for
the Supreme Court says he will contest the government's anti-terror legislation
in court, if it passes.
His speech contained some incendiary allusions to Nazi Germany and an
accusation that the federal government has tapped his phone since 1999.
Appearing next to NDP MP Andrew Cash, Galati said C-51 creates "a modern-day
Gestapo," referencing the brutal, secret Nazi police force.
"No exaggeration, that's what it creates," he said. "It chills, censors, and
criminalizes free speech, free association, and constitutional rights of
assembly."
Galati added that "German and Italian versions" of C-51 were passed in the
1930s.
The lawyer received big applause when he urged Canadians not to vote for any
MP or political party supporting the controversial Tory bill. The Liberals voted
in favour of its passing, but have vowed to amend the legislation if they win
the next election to provide better oversight of national security agencies.
New Democrat and Green MPs voted against the bill.
"This is quite clearly a fascist and dictatorial piece of legislation and
appeasement of it is unacceptable," he said.
Galati vowed that his group, the Constitutional Rights Centre, will fight the
bill in court.
Several hundred protesters gathered at Queen's Park Saturday to call on the
Senate to stop the bill, the
Toronto Sun reports. Though some Liberal senators have said they will
vote against C-51, it is expected to easily clear the upper chamber.
The bill has been denounced by the federal privacy commissioner, the Canadian
Bar Association, First Nations groups, environmental organizations, and civil
libertarians. Tories, however, have countered that the measures in the bill are
needed to keep Canadians safe.
C-51 gives the Canadian Security Intelligence Service enhanced power to
actively thwart terror plots, broadens no-fly list powers, and increases the
exchange of federal security information. It also creates a new criminal offence
of the act of encouraging someone to carry out an attack.
The bill also makes it easier for the RCMP to obtain a peace bond to restrict
the movements of suspects and extend the amount of time they can be kept in
preventative detention.
C-51 passed third reading in the House of Commons last month by a vote of
183 to 96.
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