Government killing online surveillance bill - Action News
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Politics

Government killing online surveillance bill

Federal Justice Minister Rob Nicholson says the controversial Bill C-30, known as the online surveillance or warrantless wiretapping bill, won't go ahead due to opposition from the public.

Justice Minister Rob Nicholson says controversial Bill C-30 won't go ahead

Federal Justice Minister Rob Nicholson says the controversial Bill C-30, known as the online surveillance or warrantless wiretapping bill, won't go ahead after Canadians opposed it. (Colin Perkel/Canadian Press)

Federal Justice Minister Rob Nicholson says the controversial Bill C-30, known as the online surveillance or warrantless wiretapping bill, won't go ahead due to opposition from the public.

The bill, which was knownas the Protecting Children from Internet Predators Act, was designed to help police combat child pornography. But civil liberties and privacy groupseven the federal privacy commissioner said the bill violated therights of Canadians.

Opponentslobbied strenuouslyagainst C-30, sayingit was an overly broad, "Big Brother"piece of legislationthat would strip all Canadians ofthe right to privacy.

The bill would have required internet service providers to maintain systems to allow police to intercept and track online communications without a warrant.

Canadians rallied against the bill afterPublic Safety Minister Vic Toews famously told an opposition MP that he could "either stand with us or with the child pornographers." Those explosive comments outraged many Canadians and helped to galvanize the opposition to C-30.

'We've listened to the concerns of Canadians who have been very clear on this.' Justice Minister Rob Nicholson

"We will not be proceeding with Bill C-30 and any attempts that we will continue to have to modernize the Criminal Code will not contain the measures contained in C-30, including the warrantless mandatory disclosure of basic subscriber information or the requirement for telecommunications service providers to build intercept capability within their systems," Nicholson said.

"We've listened to the concerns of Canadians who have been very clear on this and responding to that."

OpenMedia, which waged a vigorous online campaignagainst C-30 through its stopspying.ca website, hailed the decision to kill the bill.

"It came as a quite a surprise," said Lindsey Pinto of OpenMedia.ca.

"It looks like the government has finally heardthe voices of Canadians whohave been expressing themselves online in stating that C-30 is invasive, costly and poorly thought out," she said.

Nicholson made the announcement after introducing a bill to update provisions that would allow for warrantless phone tapping in emergencies.

Canadian law allows police towiretap without authorization from a court when there is the risk of imminent harm, such as a kidnapping or bomb threat,but the Supreme Court last year struck down the law andgave Parliament12 months torewrite another one.

The new bill, C-55, would give peace officers the right to secretly intercept private communications without a warrant in relatively rare, urgent situations. Someone whose communications had been intercepted in situations of imminent harm would have tobe notified by police within 90 days.

With files from The Canadian Press