This is an older article, but significant - we have similar legislation coming in New Zealand - to be passed late at night 'under urgency', without scrutiny.
These are fascist state powers directed against the forces of light.
Ottawa's
new anti-terrorism strategy lists eco-extremists as threats
After
vowing to take on radical environmentalists determined to stop the
Northern Gateway pipeline, the Harper government has released a new
anti-terrorism strategy that targets eco-extremists as threats.
16
September, 2012
With
his announcement this week, Public Safety Minister Vic Toews has
increased the concern among environmentalists that Ottawa regards
them as implacable adversaries to be monitored and battled, rather
than well-meaning advocates to be consulted.
“This
is just one more step in their attempt to marginalize the
environmental movement and to quiet its voice,” John Bennett,
executive director of Sierra Club Canada, said Friday. “It’s an
indirect suggestion that somehow environmentalism is attached to
terrorism and that’s just wrong.”
On
Thursday, Mr. Toews released a statement on the government’s
strategy, which will target not only known terrorist groups but
“vulnerable individuals” who could be drawn into politically
inspired violence.
The
minister said that, in addition to foreign threats, the government
would be vigilant against domestic extremism that is “based on
grievances – real or perceived – revolving around the promotion
of various causes such as animal rights, white supremacy,
environmentalism and anti-capitalism.”
New
Democratic Party MP Megan Leslie said the new strategy should be seen
in the context of the government’s effort to demonize the
environmental movement and aboriginal groups that are opposed to the
proposed Northern Gateway pipeline.
The
project, which would carry oil-sands bitumen to the B.C. coast for
export to Asian markets, is a top priority for Prime Minister Stephen
Harper, who has extolled Canada’s ability to supply oil to China
during his visit to the rapidly growing Asian country this week.
Mr.
Harper and Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver have warned against
foreign-funded, radical environmentalists who are determined to
derail the Gateway pipeline, while a document from the Department of
Foreign Affairs listed allies of the government’s oil-sands
development plans and “adversaries” that included environmental
and aboriginal groups.
Ms.
Leslie said the anti-terrorism strategy carries the adversarial
relationship between the government and the environmental groups to
the extreme.
“I
find it offensive that there is a list that puts people trying to
protect the environment on the same list as white supremacists,”
Ms. Leslie said. She said Ottawa has created a chill among groups
that worry they are being infiltrated and subjected to surveillance,
as police did with protest groups prior to the G20 meeting in Toronto
in 2010.
However
a spokesman for Mr. Toews said those fears are baseless, that the
government is not targeting legitimate dissent.
“Terrorist
action occurs when an extremist ideological group plans to carry out
a violent attack that reasonably can be expected to kill people or
destroy property,” Michael Patton, Mr. Toews’s director of
communication, said in an e-mail Friday.
“We
have seen individuals or groups of differing ideologies or points of
view both internationally and domestically who have planned and
carried out violent attacks to bring attention to their causes.”
There
have been fringe groups that advocated violence to stop resource
development, and a few years ago, there was a spate of pipelines
bombings in northern Alberta that caused damage but no injuries.
At
the same time, native leaders have warned Ottawa that their younger
generation is becoming increasingly impatient with the poverty of
first nations, and may turn to violence if resource projects are
approved without their agreement and participation
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