[IPSM] National Post: Aboriginal protests watched by CSIS

Jaggi Singh jaggi at resist.ca
Fri Jun 27 20:21:59 PDT 2008


Aboriginal protests watched by CSIS


Stewart Bell,  National Post  Published: Thursday, June 26, 2008


Article linked at: http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=615983


TORONTO -- Canadian security officials kept a close watch on aboriginal
rights protests across the country last summer, fearing violence and
disruption, according to newly declassified government documents.


Intelligence reports obtained by National Post reveal for the first time how
the Canadian government tracked "ongoing and planned protests" by First
Nations and their supporters from British Columbia to the Maritimes.


The Integrated Threat Assessment Centre, based at CSIS headquarters and made
up of representatives of CSIS, the RCMP, Canadian Forces and other
departments, circulated lists of protestors' plans in a series of
intelligence reports.


The Government Operations Centre was also involved. It coordinates the
national response to terrorist attacks, natural disasters and anything else
that threatens the safety and security of Canadians or the integrity of
Canada's critical infrastructure.


"A number of ongoing aboriginal protests and planned actions [are] set to
take place over the summer of 2007," ITAC says in a report marked "secret,"
one of several released to the Post under the Access to Information Act.


"While the intention of these actions is to highlight grievances through
peaceful protest, past protests have demonstrated that acts of violence or
disruptions of critical infrastructure are possible."


The close government scrutiny of the events suggests that, following fatal
stand-offs at Oka and Ipperwash, federal security agencies remained
concerned about the potential for violence.


The intelligence reports show officials were particularly concerned about
the National Day of Action held last June 29 to pressure Ottawa to address
the grievances of Canada's aboriginal peoples. Some chiefs had called for
road and rail blockades on that day.


Phil Fontaine, the National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations, said he
was "disappointed but not surprised" to learn the federal government was
monitoring the National Day of Action, and he wondered how much the
surveillance and policing had cost.


"Whatever the cost, our view is that money would have been far better spent
on providing the more than 100 First Nations communities with boil-water
advisories with clean drinking water, alleviating poverty and settling our
legitimate land claims," Chief Fontaine said. "Perhaps if that was the case,
then there wouldn't be a need to hold a National Day of Action in the first
place."


According to the documents, security officials were concerned "a small
minority" of demonstrators could escalate the protests "as a means of
attracting attention to their cause." Sympathetic environmentalists, "social
issues extremists" and criminal groups could also exploit the protests, the
reports say.


The reports identify planned protests in Toronto by the Ontario Coalition
Against Poverty, in Montreal by No One is Illegal and Block the Empire, and
by anti-Olympic activists in Vancouver.


"In addition to these, there are also non-aboriginals who may oppose the
aspirations of the aboriginals (local residents, cottagers, fishermen, etc.
and also white supremacists and other extremists)," it adds. "These factors
may cause instability and drive an individual protest in unpredictable
ways."


ITAC began producing weekly threat assessments on the demonstrations last
May. It began distributing daily intelligence updates the week of the
National Day of Action. In total, 22 reports were produced.


In addition to the events tied to the day of action, the threat assessment
reports tracked four on-going aboriginal land protests in Caledonia,
Deseronto, Grassy Narrows, and Cross Lake, Man.


"There are also a series of other potential causes for aboriginal protests
over the summer of 2007. These include fishing and logging disputes,
especially in the Maritimes; various development projects affecting
aboriginal communities; and the preparations for the 2010 Winter Olympics."


The reports say the right to protest "is a cornerstone of Canada's
democratic society. ITAC is concerned only where there is a threat of
politically motivated violence, or where protests threaten the functioning
of critical infrastructure."


National Post



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