:
Good evening, everyone. I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 15 of the House of Commons Special Committee on the Canada-People's Republic of China Relationship.
Pursuant to the order of reference of May 16, 2022, the committee is meeting for its study of Canada-People's Republic of China relations, with a focus on Chinese police stations in Canada.
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the House order of June 23, 2022. Members are attending in person in the room and remotely using the Zoom application.
I'd like to make a few comments for the benefit of witnesses, particularly those joining us on Zoom.
Please wait until I recognize you by name before speaking. If you are participating by video conference, click on the microphone icon to activate your mike, and please mute yourself when you're not speaking.
For interpretation, those on Zoom have the choice, at the bottom of their screen—it's the little earth symbol—of the floor, English or French. Those in the room can use the earpiece and select the desired channel.
I remind you that all comments should be addressed through the chair.
For members in the room, if you wish to speak, please raise your hand. For members on Zoom, please use the “raise hand” function. The clerk and I will manage the speaking order as best we can, and we appreciate your patience and understanding in this regard.
In accordance with the committee's routine motion concerning connection tests for witnesses, I'm informing the committee that all witnesses and members joining virtually have completed the required connection tests in advance of the meeting.
Today, MP Ehsassi is substituting for MP Dubourg, and MP Genuis is substituting for MP Dancho.
I'd now like to welcome our witnesses for the first panel.
In order, we will hear from Dr. Roromme Chantal, associate professor of political science, Université de Moncton, by video conference; Dr. Christian Leuprecht, professor, Royal Military College of Canada, by video conference; and, finally, Laura Harth, campaign director, Fundacion Safeguard Defenders.
Each of you will have five minutes for your opening comments. Keep an eye on the speaker. I'll give you a sign when you're getting close to your five minutes. That will leave us enough time for lots of questions, which, I'm sure, we will all have tonight.
We will start, for the first five minutes, with a commentary and introduction from Dr. Chantal.
Please proceed.
This is a wonderful opportunity for me to answer questions from your honourable colleagues and try to make my modest contribution to the current discussion about the China question. I am very glad of the opportunity and I sincerely thank the committee.
To begin, I have decided to focus on the subject proposed by the committee for this testimony. I am therefore going to address the issue of the allegations about the presence of Chinese police stations in Canada.
First, what is there that would prove that these stations exist in Canada and in the rest of the world? According to the report by the Spanish non-governmental organization, or NGO, Safeguard Defenders, there are as many as 102 overseas Chinese police stations in 53 countries, and three of those stations are located in the Greater Toronto region in Canada. More recently, however, the media also revealed the existence of two similar stations in Quebec: the Centre Sino-Québec on the south shore and the Chinese Family Service of Greater Montreal. The managers of those organizations have denied those allegations, however, and have asked that they be presumed innocent.
That said, some observers think that there might be even more overseas agents of the Chinese police. The well-known American magazine Newsweek is of that view. Newsweek says that in addition to those agents of the Chinese police, it has identified at least nine other Chinese support centres in the United States alone. It should be noted that according to the Spanish NGO, some of those centres have sometimes been established with the help of the countries where they are located, even if that is not the case in Canada.
Chinese authorities and the Chinese media deny these allegations; rather, they talk about sites that are operated, sometimes on a volunteer basis, by local Chinese communities to help overseas Chinese nationals. The People's Daily, a press organ of the Chinese Communist Party, stated that in certain places in the world where there is inadequate law enforcement, for example in Africa or South America, these stations offer security teams, firefighters and ambulance attendants. In Canada, for example, the embassy of the People's Republic of China has confirmed the addresses of certain similar stations named by the media.
Second, why would China set about establishing these overseas stations? Among other reasons often cited, there is the anti-corruption campaign carried on by President Xi Jinping since he came to power. It must be noted here that more than 900,000 members of the Chinese Communist Party have apparently been disciplined to date and 42,000 of them have been expelled and prosecuted.
The covert police stations attributed to China are also said to contribute to achieving the objectives of this anti-corruption campaign. The objective of those stations is said to be to force citizens to go back home to face the Chinese judicial system. It is important to point out that according to a Chinese vice-minister of public safety, in 2021 alone, Beijing was able to dissuade 210,000 individuals to return to China to face telecommunications fraud charges. In one case cited in some media, even a Chinese citizen living in Canada is alleged to have been pressured to return to China to face charges of embezzling Chinese public funds amounting to $380,000 in Canadian dollars.
As a final point, why would the work of these covert stations be linked to the work of the United Front Work Department of the Chinese Communist Party?
That is a question I believe to be of great importance. Historically, China has always demonstrated a desire to maintain control over the Chinese people both within and outside the country. The party describes the work of the United Front as a way for the Chinese Communist Party to unite all the sons and daughters of the party and contribute to the work of national renewal. The police stations attributed to China would thus also be linked to China's broader strategy of national and international influence.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
:
Thank you for inviting me to participate in this study, Mr. Chair.
I will be speaking in English, but please do not hesitate to ask your questions in the official language of your choice.
[English]
Beijing's espionage and interference is now the single greatest threat to Canada's democratic way of life. The PRC is intent on gaining control of Canadian critical minerals and it is actively running influence campaigns over resource development. Balloons and election interference are merely the latest episodes in a long list of hostile hybrid warfare efforts perpetrated by the CCP against Canada.
's staunch refusal to convene a public inquiry is actively jeopardizing Canada's security and its bilateral relationship with its most important strategic ally. Beijing's corruption of Canadian business and politics poses a national security problem to the United States, in part because the U.S. shares intelligence with Canada.
Recent unclassified versions of CSIS annual reports repeatedly warned about the state capture and elite capture of Canadian political, business, financial, educational and societal elites and institutions. Beijing invests heavily to make influential opinion leaders beholden to the PRC, who are then induced to repeat and lend credibility to the CCP's political disinformation. I know of Canadian academics who have been offered thousands of dollars to co-publish articles with scholars from China. Others have received lucrative trips, with all expenses paid by the regime in Beijing. In the same way, the PRC pays off politicians. Since 2015, CSIS has called out select Canadian politicians by name.
Australia's experience shows that no government is immune. In 2016, Australia's Liberal trade minister, Andrew Robb, announced that he would not run again after having negotiated deals that were exceptionally favourable to China, including a free trade agreement. Robb then took up a $880,000-a-year job with a billionaire closely connected to the CCP and its trade policy. As trade minister, Robb negotiated a 99-year lease for the Australian port of Darwin with that same Chinese billionaire.
In 2017, Labour senator Sam Dastyari quit the Australian Senate over accepting donations from entities with links to the CCP. The senator had even tipped off one such donor about being the likely subject of a counter-intelligence operation.
In 2020, the founder of a Chinese-language school in Canberra made an unsuccessful run at a seat in Australia's Senate. It turns out that he had a long history of activity with the PRC's United Front Work Department, which is tasked with mobilizing diaspora communities to meddle in foreign states.
UFWD's illicit activities have been called out by CSIS, the Privy Council and the federal court. Under broad guidance from CCP's consulates, the UFWD co-opts staff of targeted politicians, facilitates the clandestine transfer of funds, recruits potential targets, suppresses protests and supports ethnic Chinese under its influence in their election bids. The PRC maintains the second-largest diplomatic service in Canada for good reason.
Blurry lines between Beijing state organs, Asian-organized crime groups, and select members of Canada's mainland Chinese immigrant communities and business interests are the hallmark of the CCP's covert, coercive and corrupt influence, which has been systematically eroding resistance to the Chinese government from within.
Suspect activities by the CCP in Canada date back at least as far as the ill-fated Project Sidewinder in the late 1990s. This joint CSIS-RCMP investigation had been looking into the way Chinese intelligence and Chinese triads were collaborating on intelligence operations right here in Canada.
A Canadian prime minister's awareness that the fortunes of some of his party's candidates may have been aided and abetted by the CCP is all too ironic. Out of sheer self-preservation in any democracy, a ruling political party would have forced someone with as abysmal a record during his second term as Chinese President Xi Jinping's to resign. Xi never would have won a free and fair democratic election for a third term.
“Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows”, reads the famous line in Shakespeare's The Tempest. This refers to a man who's shipwrecked, and seeks shelter beside a sleeping monster. Politics makes equally strange bedfellows, and one would hope that Canadian decision-makers will finally wake up early enough to recognize the CCP for what it is.
[Translation]
Good evening to all honourable members of this committee.
Thank you for giving me the opportunity to testify on behalf of Safeguard Defenders. I also want to apologize to the francophone members of the committee, because I will be speaking in English. However, I will be happy to try to answer questions in French.
[English]
Thank you for allowing me to testify on behalf of Safeguard Defenders. Please allow me to express my sincerest gratitude to the Canadian journalists who have been shining a light on the PRC's transnational repression efforts in Canada, as well as, most importantly, to the activists and witnesses who have reported to the relevant Canadian authorities. We know the courage and sometimes very difficult choices it takes to come forward. Democratic societies owe it to you to ensure that those choices are not in vain.
I imagine members of this committee are well aware of the main findings of our September report “110 Overseas” and its December follow up “Patrol and Persuade”. I wish to highlight that everything in those reports is based exclusively on open source online statements by Chinese authorities and state or party media reports, which are available to all for independent verification.
Those sources openly describe how, starting in 2016, public security authorities from four local Chinese jurisdictions with large diaspora communities overseas established over 100 so-called overseas police service centres in at least 53 countries. At least five of those stations have listed addresses in Canada—three in the Toronto area and two in the Vancouver area. In addition, in “Patrol and Persuade”, we flagged the existence of so-called overseas Chinese service centres, two of which are located in the Montreal area and have been the subject of recent media reporting. Two more are listed by Chinese authorities, one in Markham, Ontario, and another in Vancouver.
While the origins of these organizations slightly differs—some of which, by the way, have linked subsidiaries across the country beyond the locations I mentioned—all of them share a direct and demonstrable linkage to the United Front Work Department. Understanding this linkage is fundamental.
The United Front is the prime influence agency of the Communist Party of China, which seeks to influence various public and private sector entities outside China, including but not limited to the political, commercial and academic spheres. To that end, on the one hand, the United Front promotes efforts that align policies and activities with CCP interests, while on the other hand, it seeks to divide and blunt CCP or PRC critics.
Within this sticks and carrots approach, which takes many different forms, all merit attention. As the CCP wages its hybrid war on liberal democracies and the international rules-based order, Safeguard Defenders focuses on the very extreme end of the Communist Party's transnational repression efforts.
In its so-called persuasion to return operations, the PRC uses clandestine means to coerce individuals overseas to return to China for persecution. The methods range from going after family members back home, to direct threats and harassment of targets overseas by consular or embassy personnel; proxies, such as individuals linked to the stations; private investigators; or even through the deployment of covert agents abroad. In the most extreme cases, the methods include the luring, or entrapment, of an individual in a third country, or even kidnappings on foreign soil.
While the People's Republic of China is far from the only authoritarian actor to engage in transnational repression, official numbers allow us to describe the PRC's efforts in this respect, which Freedom House defines as “the most sophisticated, global, and comprehensive campaign of transnational repression in the world.”
Staggering, and as brazen a violation of national sovereignty the overseas police service stations are, unfortunately, they're also but the tip of the iceberg. It will take a comprehensive whole-of-society approach to counter the gamut of efforts under way to actively undermine fundamental rights and freedoms, and democratic societies as a whole.
To that end, allow me to make some initial policy recommendations.
First, continued community outreach is fundamental to grow the trust needed for witnesses to come forward, and to receive timely insights into new developments and actors.
To do so, it is crucial to put an immediate and firm stop to the legitimization of networks and individuals engaged in transnational repression through their engagement with Canadian institutions and officials. In that respect, it is crucial that investigations cover the wider United Front activities on Canadian soil.
I have some more recommendations, but maybe we can get to those in the questions.
Thank you. I do look forward to your questions.
I have four very quick questions for Madam Harth, and then questions for Professor Leuprecht.
First, about the 102 overseas police stations located in 53 countries, how many deportations have these overseas police stations been linked to?
My second question is regarding persuasion to return operations. You state in your “110 Overseas” report that the PRC's Fox Hunt and Sky Net operations, which have claimed to return or coerce more than 10,000 people back to the PRC, are more “modest in scale” than the establishment of these police stations. Can you tell us in what ways the establishment of these police stations is a bigger threat than the persuasion to return operations, which have sent some 10,000 people back to the PRC?
Third, what steps can be taken to stop the co-opting of Chinese overseas hometown associations by the United Front Work Department?
Fourth, media reports from March, this month, indicate that the RCMP have begun investigating two police stations in Montreal and Brossard. Both of these stations are directed by Xixi Li, a municipal councillor for Brossard. My question is with regard to this particular municipal councillor working at this police station. How common is it for elected municipal councillors to work at these police stations, from the research that you've done?
Those are my four questions. I know that's a lot, but I wanted to get them out there.
Thank you for those questions. Regarding the number of deportations and the persuasion to return operations that we've been able to link directly to some of these stations, that number is 83. That is the anecdotal evidence that we found linked to three of the jurisdictions. One of those includes, notoriously, even video evidence put online by the Chinese authorities demonstrating how such an operation took place in a station in Madrid. We know that there have been at least 83, according to the authorities.
Are these establishments a bigger threat than, for example, the operations Fox Hunt and Sky Net? Fox Hunt and Sky Net, according to the last numbers given by the CCDI in October 2022, have netted over 11,000 successful operations between 2014 and October 2022. Successful operations means that more individuals can be included for each of those operations.
I don't think the stations are necessarily a bigger threat. They're all part of the same pattern. I think what's important in them, though, is that these stations are directly linked to the United Front Work Department. The individuals and associations linked to them are manning these stations and may be engaged in transnational repression activities that go much wider than the extreme end of persuasion to return, but are also engaged in those influence operations. In that sense, they merit attention beyond what should be the focus of these persuasion to return operations.
What steps can be taken to stop co-opting by the United Front Work Department? I think in the first place it's publicly denouncing these activities and raising awareness not within the communities, because they know all too well what's going on, but within the wider society within the communities that may be targets of influence operations, be it political circles, academic circles, media, businessmen, and everyone who may be the target of those influence operations, and trying to promote people from the diaspora communities that are not linked to them and giving them a voice. I think for too long, for decades, the main interlocutors for officials and for many other private sector institutions have been exactly the people who are tied to these networks. We need to break that linkage. That will be a difficult and long process, and it will really take a whole-of-society effort, but it starts by very clear messaging about what's going on.
Your last question was on the municipal councillor. Now, obviously there's a presumption of innocence, so until investigations are concluded and we see what comes out of that....
To my knowledge, it is not necessarily common, but at Safeguard Defenders, we as an organization are looking at the global framework rather than single individuals or associations, so I may not be the best person to respond to that.
Thank you to the witnesses for being here tonight.
Ms. Harth, I'll begin with you.
In your organization's report, there's a detailed narrative of the allegations put forward. Can you go over the evidence again? What exactly is the report pointing to, in terms of evidence that shows these are, in fact, “police stations”, for lack of a better term?
:
Thank you for the question.
Again, everything is open source and online, and can be verified.
We call them “police stations”, in the first place, because the PRC authorities that set them up do. These are, specifically, four public security authorities from four local jurisdictions in China. They vary a bit in the name they use, but they all call them “police linkage centres” or “overseas police service centres”. That's the wording they use. Obviously, the fact that they have been set up by a police body within the PRC is why we adopted that language, as well.
Among the tasks we've listed continually across sources, including newspaper articles appearing online from Chinese Communist Party media, are so-called administrative and consular tasks, which, by the way, the Chinese authorities and even embassies across the world confirmed exist, obviously. They also include tasks such as monitoring and measuring the sentiments or opinions of the community, and resolutely cracking down on crime—assisting public security authorities back in China with cracking down on crime, which, again, leads to those persuasion to return operations. We found direct evidence of the involvement of some of these stations in executing those operations.
Thank you for the question.
I am of the same opinion as Ms. Harth. It isn't that China is the only country accused of conducting these kinds of operations; however, to my knowledge, it is perhaps the only power in the contemporary world that systematically engages in these kinds of operations in democratic societies as a way of controlling its nationals there.
As well, and as Ms. Harth also said, when there are demonstrations in some countries, such as the United States, agents identified as Chinese emissaries are said to be present for the purpose, for example, of physically assaulting or intimidating demonstrators. Given all the Chinese communities that potentially exist in these countries, China would be the only country that makes such systematic use of this approach.
I can't give any more details about that idea, but I believe it must be seen as linked to a new type of influence that China is now exercising, that is being called “nuisance power”.
This is a multidimensional strategy that comprises numerous facets and does not solely involve establishing police stations; it also seeks to use China's economic power as a lever to muzzle a certain influential voice or certain organizations.
We saw this when a manager in the National Basketball Association, or NBA, took a position in support of Hong Kong. A player had taken a position, and the association was then obliged to retract and take a position in favour of China.
It is a much more multidimensional strategy that comprises numerous facets.
:
Mr. Trudel, that is an important question.
Joe Clark, a former prime minister of Canada, says in a book that Canada doesn't maintain its place and its influence on the international scene solely because of its size and power in the traditional sense of the word and its special ties with the United States. Canada is also a member of the G7. We have seen how Canada used its relationship with the European Union very effectively when the two Michaels, Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig, were arrested in China. Canada conducted a very effective campaign that involved demonstrating the extent to which China was engaged in hostage diplomacy.
Up to now, Canada has had an influential voice on the international scene despite a decline in the weight it once had. In addition, China places great weight on its reputation because the idea of a Chinese menace that is increasingly widespread in the west prevents China from projecting the image of a benevolent power, which is therefore different from the United States, for example. Its leaders make it a point of honour to portray China as a friendly power. A dispute like the one we saw with Canada caused considerable damage to China's image.
We have seen how, based on the information collected, China tried to prevent the election of the Conservative Party, which is perceived as being more critical or tougher on China, while at the same time trying to avert the election of a majority government.
For the moment, we don't know whether those efforts had very clear impacts, but it is all part of this strategy of using its nuisance power to pervert Canadian democracy in the direction, obviously, of the interests of China and the Chinese Communist Party.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to all of the witnesses for being here and sharing this information with us.
I also have a couple of questions I would like to ask all three witnesses.
First of all, this is very front and centre right now. The reports of the police stations are relatively recent; however, the idea that the Chinese government has exerted influence in Canada and has engaged in transnational repression is not new. This is something that Chinese Canadians have been warning us about for a very long time. They've been telling us that this has been happening within our academic institutions and our public spaces.
My question for you is: Why is there an increase now? I think I know the answer, but I would love to hear your perspectives on why there is an increased focus on this and increased implications from the Chinese government's interference in Canada. Also, you could touch on how you feel Canada's response to date has been and whether or not that has been a factor in why there may be a perceived or real increase in Chinese interference.
Perhaps I will start with you, Ms. Harth.
:
I think, unfortunately, that you are right. None of this is new. This has been going on for decades. We've definitely seen an increase when it comes to transnational oppression since Xi Jinping came to power. This has been going on for a long time and will only keep growing.
Why is there this attention now? I think a lot of activists and dissidents who have reported for a long time are very frustrated. Safeguard Defenders itself was a bit frustrated, because we had reported on those operations before. I think the brazen violation of national sovereignty with the police stations is what got attention. It's quite sensational. Again, it is but the tip of the iceberg of what's going on.
In terms of responses, I think Canada, as any other democracy in the world, has for too long a time closed its eyes to everything that's going on, maybe hoping that it would go away if we just didn't look at it. That has obviously only allowed these operations to grow and is putting us today at increased risk.
I think it's good that everything is coming to the surface now. It is painful. It is going to be hard getting through this. It's important that this be out in the public and that society can take stock of everything that's going on, because awareness is the first step to addressing the issues. I hope we can move forward.
In that respect, I do have to say that, when it comes to the police stations, the response we've seen from the RCMP, from what we can gauge from media reports and so on, has definitely been among the best in democracies across the world.
:
I think my answer will involve examining three aspects of the issue.
Since Xi Jinping came to power, he has clearly put an end to what China had considered to be the “low profile” policy on the international scene since Deng Xiaoping. Xi Jinping thought that the time had come for China to claim a leadership role alongside the America superpower. He has even called for a new type of relationship among the great powers.
Obviously, the end of China's peaceful rise and the claim to a more active role led certain major powers to see a much greater Chinese threat. I am not saying that China was invading other countries around it in Asia. However, in response, Xi Jinping has tried to employ strategies that resembled public diplomacy, if you will, except that what China did, it did in secret.
The other thing, to finish, is that the world has very clearly fallen into a new cold war, even though some analysts refuse to use that term. Today, we very clearly have two models. On one side, we have the liberal democracy model, which brings together the United States, the American allies in western Europe and Canada, and on the other side, we have what is an authoritarian or neo-totalitarian model, according to some critics, proposed by China and Russia, for example.
Given all this, we must now expect that there will be a degree of aggression in the approach used by powers like China or Russia when it comes to the strategy we are discussing this evening.
I think what we have is a culmination of 35 years of efforts by China. We also now have a critical mass of elite capture in this country as a result, which China is capitalizing on.
I would say in response that to date, I cannot share my colleague's optimism with regard to the RCMP. Show me the last national security foreign interference or espionage investigation the RCMP completed to the point where we actually had a prosecution and successful conviction in this country.
I think the Chinese regime operates with impunity. Canada has not made any efforts to deter it, as we can see by the recent choice by Canada to stay out of, for instance, even something such as AUKUS.
:
I don't know whether that would provide a solution to the problem, but if a registry like that were considered to be useful, then that would be fine.
If you would allow me a few seconds now, I would like to say that the problem is much more complex. Chinese nationals who are supposed to be part of this strategy on the part of mainland China may be forced to participate in it, but there are also Canadian citizens of Chinese descent who are living here, or American citizens of Chinese descent, who identify, one way or another, with mainland China and may willingly participate in the objectives of the Chinese Communist Party.
It would therefore be difficult to put that kind of registry in place, in that these are much more open liberal democratic societies that consequently respect individual liberties.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank all of the witnesses. You're here tonight as experts, and it is very important to us to get your testimony.
This committee will most likely engage in writing a report following this study, and when we get into that closed-door, in camera session, we look at the testimony that you have given us. That is how it gets into the report. I for one will always try to ensure that it's substantiated testimony and actually based in fact, not just opinion. With that, I want to talk to Professor Leuprecht to ask a few questions.
In your testimony tonight, you said that international organizations are being suborned by the PRC to the detriment of Canada's interests. Can you name those and show us exactly how that is happening?
Mr. Leuprecht, we get the feeling that Canada is an absolutely incredible Swiss cheese. In the last few weeks, a number of incidents have been reported. Balloons have flown over Canada and the United States. From what we know, one balloon was shot down, but we don't really know what happened in the case of the other balloons.
There is talk of direct interference in Canadian elections and of Chinese police stations set up in Canada. A few weeks ago, representatives of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the RCMP, told us that the RCMP was not aware that there were Chinese police stations in Quebec. Three weeks ago, before it was reported in the media, I asked a member of the RCMP a question, but his answer was that he was not aware of these incidents. Either he was lying or he really didn't know, which really is concerning.
There is also talk of the arrest of a spy at Hydro-Québec, who was working in the development of electrical technology such as motors and batteries, a very important field that will be critical in the years to come. What we are hearing is incredible and concerning.
What is Canada not doing? Conversely, what could Canada do, right now, to make sure this doesn't happen again?
:
First, the federal police would have to focus its resources on its federal mandate. At present, the RCMP dedicates 85% of its resources and efforts to provincial, territorial and local policing, at the expense of its federal mandate.
Second, Canada is the only G7 country that has no foreign human intelligence gathering service. There is a foreign intelligence gathering service provided by the Communications Security Establishment, or CSE, but there is no human intelligence gathering service. What that means is that we are virtually blind in one eye, because the foreign activities of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, or CSIS, are very limited.
To understand what hostile countries are doing in our own country, we must also necessarily understand their activities outside Canada. At present, there are no such measures in place. Over the last 30 years, it seems that no government was prepared to make that kind of investment.
:
Do you mean to the Chinese threat? I don't think we've seen a complete comprehensive response from any country so far. Obviously, the United States is the country that has woken up first to the threat. They are also obviously the prime enemy of the Chinese Communist Party. It's not hiding that.
In that sense, I think it is important to see that when the PRC targets a certain country for influence operations, similar to Russia, it is not looking at influencing only that particular country; it's also trying to chip away at existing democratic alliances, defence alliances for when it plans to make its next move, for example, on Taiwan. That is something very similar to what we have seen Russia do and still see Russia doing, for example, with its disinformation campaigns or by creating those kinds of dependencies. It was energy dependencies with Europe. For Russia we see the PRC heavily investing and quite openly talking about wanting to enhance economic interdependency of other countries on its economy, all the while working to insulate its own economy from external shocks.
There are a couple of things going on, and I think we have only recently begun to actually be aware of that issue. It is high time. This is not any individual country's individual issue. This is a big threat to the democratic alliance as a whole, to the international rules-based order, so we need to coordinate on this and really start responding.
In our Canadian debate about foreign interference, I would say that there have been two predominant views expressed. One has come from many in the government, which is to say that they view the purpose of foreign intervention as being to create chaos and undermine trust in institutions in every case, and therefore they think that we should avoid talking about foreign interference too much because the discussion of it undermines trust.
On the other hand, my view would be that foreign interference is sometimes about undermining trust in institutions but it's more fundamentally about trying to advance the interests of a foreign power through whatever means. That could involve weakening trust, but also electing more pliant candidates, stealing technology, breaking alliances or stifling criticism.
My view is also that we need to talk about this problem in order to resolve it. That includes holding institutions accountable for their failures.
I'd like to hear briefly from all of the witnesses. What do you think is the purpose of foreign interference? In other words, which of the two views do you identify with more? Should we be talking about it or not?
Ms. Harth, we'll start with you.
Mr. Chantal, thank you for being with us, live from the Université de Moncton in New Brunswick. The university may be getting a new name in the next few weeks or months. We never know.
This evening, other witnesses and yourself have told the committee that foreign interference was not something new. We have been hearing about interference by China for years. Some people seem to be saying that this has only been going on since the government was elected in 2015, but I don't think that is the case.
What do you see as the reason why we are seeing a resurgence of interest in this subject at present, and what has prompted the public to take much more of an interest in this problem?
Is there something that should be done to demystify it all and explain that this is not a new phenomenon and that the government is making all the necessary arrangements to put measures in place for preventing it from happening?
:
That is a question that, again, is extremely important.
My position on this subject is not the most popular, since there are growing numbers of voices calling for a virtually total uncoupling of western economies from China's. I don't think this strategy serves Canada's national interest.
Today, we need to be responsible, even if we have convictions. China is a major power on the Security Council. You can't do anything about climate change without cooperating with China. On poverty-related problems in Africa, for example, you have to collaborate with China.
Despite China's unpopularity, and even a certain hysteria when it comes to China that sometimes leads to irrational policies, I would propose that we keep a certain perspective. Yes, we have to address the challenges posed by China, but without necessarily breaking off all ties with China, because, to my mind, that would not be in Canada's national interest.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chantal.
Ms. Harth, feel free to answer in English, but I thought your French was impeccable. On this International Francophonie Day, it would be fine if you wanted to answer in French.
On the subject of the police stations, how did you manage to discover that they exist, whether in Canada or elsewhere?
Can you explain the process you followed, to the public who are listening to us? What information enabled you to make that discovery?
:
It's very hard to look into individual operations. There's not a lot of evidence on individual operations. We do have some larger numbers that are put out there by the PRC authorities, but we do see the use of third countries happening not only with Canada but also in other places.
I would say, though, that it might be a very good indication that the actions the U.S. authorities have been putting in place in a cross-departmental fashion over the past two or three years are effective, at least to the extent of maybe scaring them a bit more, so trying to conduct those operations on foreign soil where that attention was just not as present.
When it comes to individual operations, though, we have big numbers. It's very hard to find those individual cases. I can tell you that anecdotal evidence, again open source, indicates that at least three persuasion to return operations have taken place on Canadian soil. There's likely many more, but those are the numbers we can get from the evidence.
Just to be clear, the PRC authorities state that they conduct these operations in over 120 countries around the world. That is virtually every single country in the world, be there a police station or not.
:
The first one is obviously what a lot of countries have done, which is calling out publicly and immediately the fact that these are illegal. That is something Canada has done.
The second is to launch investigations, which may take some time. This is again what is happening in Canada and a growing number of democratic nations around the world. As was pointed out earlier, some of them have ordered the closure of these stations. Again, while we think that in terms of public messaging that is very valuable, it does not solve the actual issue.
In terms of policy recommendations beyond the ongoing investigations, one is to look beyond the addresses. This is not just about a single address. This is about the networks of individuals and organizations running these and similar organizations running similar operations even if there is not officially a police station. It is crucial that all investigations really go into the wider United Front activities, both to counter transnational repression and also those other influence operations.
We really call on allied democracies to face this common threat together. This is pretty new for most countries. We need a coordinated framework, for example, to start from the G7 to define transnational repression, share intelligence and best counter-practices. It could even include the potential adoption...because the issue of indictments and prosecution was pointed out. That is an issue that, for example, the U.S. authorities are also dealing with. Just this week a bipartisan proposal for a legislative framework on transnational repression was put forward exactly to adopt the kind of criminal clauses and legal framework that may be necessary to counter that repression.
These are some of the steps to be taken.
My apologies.
I would again like to thank all the witnesses for their testimony. The discussion is extremely interesting.
I am going to put the same question to Mr. Leuprecht and Mr. Chantal.
For the last two or three weeks, we have been witnessing a sad spectacle. The government is playing for time while everyone in Canada—parliamentarians, many journalists and opinion makers—are calling on the government to institute an independent investigation to get to the bottom of things, in view of everything we have learned.
Do you think the government is playing for time by appointing a special rapporteur who is close to the government and close to China?
Don't you think it would be preferable to institute an independent inquiry immediately?
:
It seems to me that before announcing that a rapporteur had been appointed, the government could have made sure that all parties in Parliament agreed on the choice of the rapporteur and all agreed on the rapporteur's impartiality.
Unfortunately, the government chose to do things differently, as was the case for the study done by the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians, or NSICOP.
The government could make an exception and say that NSICOP could present its study not to the executive but to Parliament, and Parliament could decide the content of the study and the scope of the report to be presented to Parliament.
I believe the government has means available to it to ensure impartiality, apart from a public inquiry.
:
It may be that the government is trying to gain a bit of time. However, there is also no assurance that if a public inquiry were instituted, it would produce the right result. I think that on this question, we also have to allow the authorities here in Canada time to do their work. When the time comes, we will be able to determine what kind of additional decision to make.
As well, Canada is being pressured by the United States, which is in direct competition with China. There is a danger here, however. We have seen it in the past, for example in the case of Iraq in 2003. Colin Powell, as the representative of the United States, went to the United Nations, the UN, to say there were weapons of mass destruction. We later realized that there were none. So there is a tendency to exaggerate the Chinese threat and not give the authorities in place time to act. The threat exists, but we have to be careful to make the right decisions.
Nor is hysteria about China what is going to enable us to address the Chinese threat properly.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Ms. Harth, I want to dig in a little bit more into what our next steps should be and give you a little bit more time there. Before I do that, I want to point out, which I think is important to get on the record, that when we hear the phrase “police stations” or “overseas Chinese police stations”, perhaps that's a misnomer. I think you brought that up. It's not an address. It's not a location. It is a bigger thing. They've been described to me as “clandestine hubs” for foreign influence activities, as these locations should not be understood within conventional understanding of policing activities.
You spoke about the registry's not being, perhaps, a useful mechanism. You've spoken about the need for community outreach and the adoption of a framework. Are there any other things this committee needs to hear from you about what we should be doing next?
:
—so I thank you for giving me the opportunity to point it out.
Let me just point out that I don't want to say the registry might not be useful. I just think that, as a stand-alone solution, it's not a solution, right? It must be part of a wider framework of options.
My last recommendation would actually be, aside from those already said, that together with allies.... This also goes back a bit to the questions asked by Mr. Chong on international institutions. Canada has the Magnitsky human rights act. Together with allies, you should consider sanctions on the PRC institutions and officials responsible for these transnational repression efforts, starting with that Central Commission for Discipline Inspection and the Ministry for Public Security, recalling that these two institutions are responsible not only for these transnational repressions and illegal policing activities on foreign soil, but also for crimes against humanity and even genocide inside China. It's high time that we started holding these individuals and institutions to account, and definitely interrupt all co-operation, be it with international institutions or at a bilateral level.
:
Thank you, all. We're back in session.
We would now like to invite the two panellists for our second round. Unfortunately, Mr. Juneau-Katsuya was unable to make our session tonight. There was a family issue he had to deal with, and we can certainly understand that.
We are joined by Gloria Fung, president, Canada-Hong Kong Link, by video conference, and Henry Chan, co-director, Saskatchewan Stands with Hong Kong.
We will begin with statements of five minutes or less by each of our guests.
Ms. Fung, given the testing we did on your microphone, I'll ask you to use your “big voice” so everyone can hear you.
:
Mr. Chair, thank you for inviting me to testify before the committee.
I'm Gloria Fung, president of Canada-Hong Kong Link, a community organization established 25 years ago to promote democracy, rule of law, freedom and human rights in Hong Kong and to encourage the full participation of Canadians of Hong Kong origin in all aspects of Canadian society.
For decades, civil society organizations have reported foreign agents' intimidation of Canadians and meddling in our politics. Unfortunately, our government has not responded to these concerns. Therefore, a comprehensive network of pro-CCP United Front organizations has operated virtually unchecked, threatening our freedom of expression, national security and democracy.
The Chinese police stations are a collaborative effort of United Front organizations and the Public Security Bureau of China, enabling the CCP to stretch its arms far and wide. They repress Asian diaspora communities, collect civil intelligence, and harass and intimidate Canadians who are critical of Beijing's policies.
As a pro-democracy organizer, I have received threatening calls warning me to stop meddling in Hong Kong's affairs or face serious consequences. There have been numerous unsuccessful attempts to hack into my emails. When I was in Hong Kong speaking against the draconian extradition bill, there were attempts to track me down and likely abduct me.
In 2019, CCP proxies organized counterprotests to jeopardize Canadians' freedom of expression in many cities. Clearly, diaspora community members are victims of foreign harassment and intimidation. Above all, we are appalled by CCP proxies meddling in elections at all levels of government by spreading disinformation, manipulating party nominations and secretly funding candidates.
Therefore, the Canadian Coalition for a Foreign Influence Registry, comprising 33 multicultural organizations, urges the passage of a foreign influence registry act with Criminal Code application before Parliament's summer recess. This registry is supported by 88% of Canadians surveyed in two recent Nanos national polls. It would apply to individuals and entities working on behalf of any foreign country, not just China, and to people of every ethnic background, not just Chinese Canadians. It would place no restriction on legal co-operation or exchanges with foreign governments, but it would be a legislative tool to hold foreign agents accountable. The transparency it would provide is sorely lacking now.
There is no connection between the registry and anti-Chinese racism. The cloud of suspicion hanging over our community is not created by talk of a registry but by the covert actions of malign foreign agents. We need to know who they are and differentiate them from virtually all Chinese Canadians.
Urgent action is needed to address this threat to Canadian society. There should be an independent public inquiry. CSIS and the RCMP need enhanced capacity to monitor information and conduct investigations in Mandarin, Cantonese and Fujianese. Finally, Chinese diplomats attached to the Ministry of State Security or the United Front Work Department should be expelled.
Thank you.
:
Mr. Chair, thank you for the invitation to appear before you to speak on a matter of great gravity.
It has always been known that the United Front's workforce has been operating in Canada to intimidate and harass dissenters. Their work also includes repatriating Chinese nationals for corruption charges.
The same objective was true in 2019 when the Hong Kong SAR government introduced an bill to extradite Hong Kongers and Chinese nationals for corruption and political charges. Mr. Chair, four years ago Hong Kongers fought with their lives to defend themselves from such arbitrary actions by the Chinese Communist Party.
The Chinese police station is an extended arm that intrudes on Canadian sovereignty. It undermines our government, our law enforcement and our democratic institutions. The police stations are an extension of the United Front, and by ousting such operations it paints a picture in the minds of Canadians of just how far the CCP will go to assert its influence on foreign soil.
Mr. Chair, the CCP is testing our resolve, and we must take these threats very seriously.
Around the community I have been collecting testimonies from people who have experienced first-hand the brutal nature of the Communist regime. There was one gentleman I spoke to who left China after constant harassment from the regime, because he merely said a few words against the regime and was recorded by party members. His wife urged him to leave China, and then they settled in Saskatchewan. However, constant bombardments of phone calls and threats made against his extended family in China persuaded him to return. He was only allowed to come back to Canada after selling off most of his assets and handing a significant portion to the government. He was lucky to only lose money. We often hear of people who are persuaded to return and they disappear from the face of the earth.
Mr. Chair, we're here today not only to tell you that there are real people who are in danger of the extended arm of the CCP, but also to call for concrete and meaningful actions.
Since the founding of Saskatchewan Stands with Hong Kong in 2019, we have been calling for government to establish a foreign agent registry to expose those working on behalf of malign regimes. It is not the moon we're asking for. The U.S. passed it in 1938, Australia in 2018, and the U.K. currently has a government bill in session.
In 2020 we organized petition e-2835 to call for a foreign agent registry. Again last November we organized petition e-4172 to call for action to deal with foreign interference and for the immediate shutdown of the Chinese police station. Even before we were able to coordinate the petition, Ireland and the Netherlands had already ordered the immediate shutdown of such operations. On this, our government has been timid and slow.
There are lots of Canadians who care about this issue, and I'm one who does. I intend to share my real views with you this evening.
The news of foreign interference and meddling in our election is very concerning. In the community, I have already been hearing, “Who is running our government?” Many came to Canada because their country was no longer safe.
Now, seeing the overreach of regimes into our democracy is deeply troubling. The public trust has already been shaken. Therefore, there must be total clarity and sunlight as to what is happening and why it was allowed to happen.
My observations are that most of our policies dealing with regimes have been passive in response. I firmly believe that in developing our Canada-China policy, we must bear in mind three things.
One, China does not respect weakness.
Two, the CCP cannot be trusted. It's a regime that has been known to roll back on its own commitments.
Three, we are dealing with a regime that every day attempts to find cracks in our democracy, and we must suspect that they're looking for ways to undermine our stability.
If we keep these things in mind, I believe we will have a better chance of a China policy that is proactive, rather than reactive.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'd like to thank our witnesses for coming today to talk about foreign interference and these illegal police stations.
My first question is for both witnesses.
Would you say that the Chinese community is the biggest victim of the PRC's foreign interference threat activities, whether it be the establishment of these illegal police stations, the PRC organizing counter-protests to pro-Hong Kong democracy activists, or other meddling in our democracy?
Maybe we'll go to Madam Fung first.
:
I fully agree that the Chinese Canadian community is the biggest victim of Chinese foreign interference.
Over the past decades, I have seen our community being infiltrated and manipulated. Many of our community members who are outspoken about Beijing policies have been cracked down upon by some of these secret police or even the United Front organizations in peaceful rallies and other kinds of public forums.
If there's ever a cloud of suspicion being created by the recent discussions of the meddling into elections by the Chinese embassy or its processes in Canada, eventually Chinese Canadians are going to suffer, because there will be a cloud of suspicion. However, we have to be very clear about who has created this cloud of suspicion. It's not the talk or the suggestion of the passage of a foreign interference registry, but rather the actions. It is the infiltration and the meddling into elections by many of these processes that have created this cloud of suspicion. Therefore, even in terms of police stations, the mainland Chinese are by far the biggest victims of this operation.
I have reached out to different mainland Chinese pro-democracy groups, and I have had interviews with a number of people who are actively involved in the anti-CCP or pro-democracy movement in Canada.
:
I'd like to ask a very personal question of both of you.
I'm a Canadian of Chinese descent. I was born in 1971 to a Chinese immigrant father who came here from Hong Kong. I was born in a country where non-whites made up a very small percentage of our country's population and where attitudes were substantially different from what they are today in a country that had only recently done away with its whites-only immigration policy. I know first hand what it's like to be the target of anti-Asian racism.
I find it beyond the pale when I hear those out in the public debate suggest that by raising questions about Beijing's foreign interference here in Canada by advocating for a foreign agent registry, we are somehow responsible for fomenting anti-Asian racism in Canada. I find it beyond the pale that people would suggest that.
I think we have to do both. We have to fight anti-Asian racism and discrimination and, at the same time, seriously counter Beijing's very real threats to our democracy. To do one and not the other is either to abandon our fellow citizens of Asian descent to racism or, alternatively, to allow Beijing to continue to interfere in our democracy.
I wonder if you both feel the same way.
:
Maybe I can answer first.
I, personally, had direct experience of being intimidated and harassed—actually in Canada. I have, from time to time, received threatening calls. At the same time, there have been attempts to hack into my email. Every time we come to important days like July 1 or October 1, there are emails containing files that are tempting me to open them, so that they can hack into my computer.
The most serious case was the time I was back in Hong Kong. After speaking at an international press conference calling upon the international community to support Hong Kong people in the fight against the extradition bill, I received emails pretending to be from people from mainland China who needed my urgent help. I fully understood that this was an attempt to track me down and possibly abduct me. During my time in Hong Kong, I had to ask all my friends to accompany me back to the hotel every time I finished my meetings.
This is my personal experience. Maybe at another time I can also share cases of other people, particularly the mainland Chinese activists here, regarding their experiences of being intimidated and harassed.
Thanks to the witnesses for being with us. It is very interesting to talk about their personal experience.
Ms. Fung, you have been the target of intimidation yourself.
Mr. Chan, you say that you have not suffered intimidation.
The report of the Fundacion Safeguard Defenders, which Ms. Harth represents today, is entitled “110 Overseas: Chinese Transnational Policing Gone Wild.”
That report says that as part of an anti-fraud campaign, the People's Republic of China says it has persuaded 230,000 of its citizens, worldwide, between April 2021 and July 2022, to return to the People's Republic of China to face criminal prosecutions. We are talking here about 230,000 people, which really is an astronomical figure.
My question is for both you, Mr. Chan, and you, Ms. Fung.
Are there people in your organization whom you know and whose story you can tell, people who were here in Canada and were persuaded to return to China?
How is it done? Where there threats, emails? Can you tell us more about this?
:
I think the harassment and also the coercion for dissidents who return back to China have been a collaborative effort by both the public safety department or public safety bureau of China and the United Front organizations in Canada.
I'll cite you an example. One of the mainland Chinese dissidents I talked to has been under constant surveillance by CCP agents on Canadian soil. His family members have been shown photos of this dissident's family picture, and also showing him having dinner with his family in Toronto. He was totally shocked about this, because he thought he had come to a safe and free society. He didn't know that he was still under surveillance in Canada. He asked me why our government hasn't done anything to protect them from the Chinese Communist Party.
Actually, eventually, because he refused to self-censor, his brother got laid off. Then the parents of his wife, his in-laws, were put in jail. It shows the severity of this kind of coercion and also threats, intimidation and harassment of people in Canada.
I referred earlier to the 230,000 people worldwide who have been persuaded to return to China.
Apart from the personal stories you have told us, Mr. Chan and Ms. Fung, have your organizations recorded information about those people?
Do you know people in your organizations who have returned to China, and can you tell us how many? Were there 350, or 500, or 1,000?
:
I think the very first step the government can take is to pass a foreign influence registry, so as to provide a legislative tool for the RCMP to hold individuals and entities with a working relationship with a foreign regime accountable. I've been told by an RCMP officer that the law is not with them. It seems that, compared with other countries, we have very limited legislative tools for our enforcement department to work with. That is why it is so important for us to pass a FIRA as soon as possible.
Second, there should be other measures considered by our government to cover foreign interference in other aspects of society.
Third, I think the RCMP needs to be provided with more resources to enhance their investigative capacity. More importantly, they also need to enhance their understanding of malign foreign interference. In general, it's not only the RCMP. Many of our politicians and bureaucrats have very little knowledge about how foreign interference operates, how to detect it, and how we can come up with an effective strategy to combat it.
All of these take a collaborative effort by the enforcement department and the community, in order to enhance the exchange between the two and restore public trust in our enforcement department.
We are learning new things every day about how the Chinese government does things. There is interference in federal elections, and we have learned that there was interference in municipal elections. I talked about that earlier. We don't know, but there has probably been interference in provincial elections.
We know that the Chinese police stations are often welcome centres for immigrants where various assistance is offered to immigrants. The representative of the Fundacion Safeguard Defenders told us about this. They are given food, clothing, advice, legal assistance, and so on. Bit by bit, it morphs into a police station and a Chinese government intelligence centre.
Three weeks ago, during a meeting of this committee, I asked a representative of the RCMP whether that organization had intelligence to show that service centres helping the Chinese population in Brossard or Montreal were police stations. We are talking about the Chinese Family Service of Greater Montreal and the Centre Sino-Québec on the south shore, which are centres that provide assistance to the Chinese community in Montreal.
The representative of the RCMP said that that organization had no information to say that those centres were Chinese police stations. That was unequivocal, three weeks ago. One week ago, it appeared on page one of theJournal de Montréal. Not only are these both Chinese police stations, but the person who manages those two police stations is now a municipal councillor in Brossard. She was helped by the Chinese government, which posted messages on the WeChat platform. That is a bit troubling.
Mr. Chan or Ms. Fung, have you heard about there being Chinese police stations in Saskatchewan, and that candidates in municipal elections supported by China have been elected in your communities?
:
Maybe I can start first.
I have been observing and collecting data on foreign interference in elections at three levels of government over the last three decades. I have also served as a political commentator on this particular topic.
I have witnessed a growing level of interference from CCP over the last 30 years. Now they have not only interfered with municipal elections, but it has also occurred in provincial elections and then, last of all, at the federal level of elections. I don't want to go into all of the details, because I believe that the CSIS report or many of the media reports have already covered it.
However, based on our observation, the United Front organizations have been playing a very important role in channelling financial subsidies from the Chinese embassy or maybe directly from the United Front Work Department of China to their preferred candidates. I have seen banquets being filled with all of these people. They ask their individual members to donate to the preferred candidates in order to ensure their winnability. A number of years ago—
I would like to continue with Mr. Ehsassi's questioning about Chinese language media.
We've had such witnesses in front of this committee previously, even in the previous Parliament. Victor Ho, the former editor-in-chief of the Sing Tao Daily, has indicated a very similar view to Ms. Fung's here today, that a lot of Chinese language media in Canada has been co-opted by the PRC. It's also something that CSIS noted in its briefing and assessment to the Prime Minister in documents that it released to another committee of the House of Commons, the procedure and House affairs committee.
I want to ask you a question by highlighting an allegation that I heard in the fall of 2021 that I've looked up. I took note of it at the time. I want to know if you've heard of similar things going on in Chinese language media.
I heard allegations that hosts on a local radio station in Vancouver, AM 1320, were instructed not to interview a certain Conservative MP or even refer to or mention that Conservative MP's name on air. One host subsequently did interview this Conservative MP and was terminated. Another host simply mentioned this Conservative MP's name on air and had his broadcast hours reduced as a result. I found this to be a shocking allegation for a regulated broadcaster in Canada. I referred the matter to the appropriate authorities in the federal government.
I'm wondering if you have heard of similar kinds of examples of Chinese language media, particularly CRTC-regulated media that have public licences, having been co-opted by the PRC in such a way.
:
This kind of situation is not confined to the west coast. This is also happening on the east coast.
Radio stations, TV stations, have all been infiltrated, or from time to time the management staff will be summoned by the Chinese embassy for advice to them as to what they should report on, or whom they should avoid interviewing.
In 2019, there was instruction from the Chinese embassy advising lots of the Chinese-language media to reduce their coverage of Hong Kong-related news because there were too many supportive actions going on in Canada. I personally have been blacklisted by a Chinese language channel, Fairchild TV, here. One of the managers who has already left told their reporters and editors that I should not be interviewed by them.
It is a very concerning situation we are in because they either exercise self-censorship or they kowtow to the so-called “advice” from the Chinese embassy—maybe because they pay more attention to who pays for the ads, but that shouldn't be the case.
The CRTC has not done a good job either because many years ago the CRTC approved nine mainland Chinese TV station programs in Canada, allowing them to spread the communist ideology and pro-Beijing programs on Canadian soil, but we have never been allowed to have our Canadian program in China, so why should we continue to do so?
I think it's about time for us to evaluate all of these policies.
:
Okay, two and a half minutes.
[Translation]
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Ms. Fung, earlier, you talked about a very interesting subject, election interference. You say that you have been following what goes on at the municipal, provincial and federal levels.
In the House of Commons, as in the leading Canadian media, possible interference by China in the Canadian electoral process came as an electric shock. That was actually an important statement. You show how commonplace it is when you say you have been observing it for 30 years and you have seen others.
You seem to be saying that you know which municipal or provincial candidates have received assistance from China.
Can you tell us more about that?
Over the past few decades, I have witnessed the evolution of China's infiltration in elections. They have changed from a more reactive strategy to the current, very arrogant and active strategy of sending their own people to run for office, including some underground party members.
They have also broken a lot of Elections Canada rules and regulations, in order to provide donations from abroad. When we tracked down some of these donations a couple of years ago, before Elections Canada changed its rules and regulations, they came with decimal points. Why was that? It was because the donations were made in foreign currency. When transferred here, the amounts had decimal points. Apart from that, so-called volunteers—they were actually paid—were sent to help with their preferred candidates' election campaigns. I think some of the names have been disclosed recently, as part of the 11 MPs' names. They also got assistance from the embassy, through the United Front organization.
It is not confined to that. There are other tactics being deployed by the pro-Beijing camp and strong advocates who are very close to the Chinese embassy. I understand they have been using the “anti-Chinese racism” narrative to silence people who are critical of Beijing policies.
:
Thanks very much to our two witnesses.
I would like to report something that was told to another committee by the acting commissioner of the RCMP: Apparently, acting on solid evidence, the RCMP put cruisers outside of these “police stations” in Vancouver and Toronto. That led to their being shut down. There was, in fact, some deviant work going on there.
We've also heard, especially from our two witnesses right now, many comments about things that are going on. The committee might value it if you were to follow up with written material naming names. We seem to be shooting at ghosts here, because there's an insinuation or a suggestion that this or that happened. It would be very useful to us to get some specifics, which we can turn over to the authorities, if necessary.
In any event, it is time to wrap it up for this evening.
I'd like to thank our two witnesses, our interpreters, technicians, analysts, our clerk and our staff who are here with us tonight. Thank you all for your time. It was a great session.
The meeting is adjourned.