Oops, Did We Do THAT, Again?!
"If this is really a police station from China, they can use the funds to expand their network and their connections.""This is also one way to monitor the many international Chinese students that are here [on a study visa in Canada]."Benjamin Fung, McGill University professor"[Beijing uses the United Front Work Department] to stifle criticism, infiltrate foreign political parties, diaspora communities, universities and multinational corporations."Public Safety Canada 2021 memorandum"Getting funding in Canada legitimizes the group and provides it more of a foothold.""It can obviously strengthen it, it can obviously get it closer to fundraising activities and give it more opportunities for influencing people."Dennis Molinaro, former national security analyst
The Centre Sino-Québec in Brossard denies the RCMP's allegation that it could in fact be operating as a kind of police station for the Chinese government. (CBC) |
Service
a la Famille Chinoise du Grand Montreal (SFCGM), a charity based in
Montreal advertising itself as a social resource from Chinese immigrants
to Canada, is under investigation by the RCMP to clarify whether it is,
as suspected, hosting a secret Chinese 'police station'. These police
stations have been popping up all over the world, wherever expatriate
Chinese have immigrated and taken out citizenship, from Europe, to North
America.
Those
that were discovered in the United States have been summarily shut down
by US authorities. Those in Canada are being monitored, some but not
all shuttered by government. It has now been revealed that Canada's
Liberal-led government has seen fit since 2020 to support the charity
financially. Funding, according to experts on Chinese foreign
interference that may certainly have aided those acting on behalf of
Beijing to expand the network of the Chinese Communist Party in Canada.
And in the process 'legitimizing' it.
According
to the RCMP, the charitable organization may be the host of one of two
secret Chinese 'police stations' in Quebec. Billing themselves as
promoting initiatives for the Chinese community in Canada's well-being,
it is also understood that these police agents aggressively harass
Canadian-Chinese citizens who are critical of Beijing, attempting to
bully them to return to China to face charges of treason. These are
Canadian citizens who live in fear of being watched, who receive
threatening messages. And who are obliquely informed their families back
in China may suffer.
The
RCMP, Canada's national police force, has an investigation underway of
the organization, part of a large probe whose purpose is to "detect and perturb criminal activities supported by a foreign state that can threaten the safety of people living in Canada".
Because of its charitable status, the SFCGM is legally required to file
financial records which reveal that the government of Canada funded a
total of $200,000 in public funds in the last reported fiscal year.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick (Justin Trudeau) and AP Photo/Thibault Camus, File (Xi JingPing |
This
funding is tracked through the auspices of a federal government grants
and contributions database listing contributions from Employment and
Social Development Canada as well, as far back as 2018, meant to support
summer program youth employment. Other contributions support the
organization's New Horizons for Seniors program meant to train seniors
in Quebec's Chinese community in the use of online communication tools "in order to maintain their contact with the community and their families".
All
of which sounds innocent enough on the surface, yet an analysis by
pro-democracy group Action Free Hong Kong maintains that the programs
are a means by which secret Chinese police stations build their
networks. Critics of the Chinese Communist Party, according to Professor
Benjamin Fung of McGill University, have been aware for years of an
"underground" influence network in Canada for the Chinese Communist
Party. He was himself, he explained, a target of harassment.
For its part, the charity leadership questioned why the RCMP
"would publicly name two community centres serving the Chinese
communities in Quebec, causing serious and potentially irreparable harm
to the community", calling for respect of the "presumption of innocence". Senator Yuen Pau Woo called on the RCMP to "provide information, clarity, and in the meantime, don't create more problems for the community".
A
recent expose in the Toronto Star cited Chinese media reports in 2015
that the charity in question was designated an Overseas Chinese Service
Centre by China's Overseas Chinese Affairs Office (which itself is
part of China's controversial United Front Work Department, a
designation that generally accompanies Chinese government funding).
Dennis Molinaro, expert on Chinese foreign interference, pointed out
that organizations acting at Beijing's behest often seek foreign
government funding for optical legitimacy.
In
the last three reported fiscal years, SFCGM reported over $4.46 million
in government funding, the bulk from Quebec's Ministry of Immigration,
Francisation and Integration. The department, according to a
spokesperson, "recently decided to halt all remaining contracts with SFCGM".
The same department cut close to $1 million in reoccurring funding to
the organization, resulting from an audit that examined SFCGM's
governance, "sound management" and reporting.
According
to the Spanish human rights organization Safeguard Defenders, the
police stations, of which Safeguard identified over 100 in over 50
countries, serve to "persuade" people whom Chinese authorities claim are
fugitives, to return to China, to face charges.
Labels: Beijing, Chinese Police Stations, Government of Canada, Harassing Chinese-Canadians, RCMP Investigation
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