Alberta introduced a new privacy
law which will apply to the private
sector in Alberta. Please see the government website:
http://www.psp.gov.ab.ca for
more information.
News Release - 2001-2002 Annual Report - January 29, 2003 - Privacy
Commissioner of Canada
News Release
Ottawa, January 29, 2003 - The Privacy Commissioner of Canada,
George Radwanski, today tabled his 2001-2002 Annual Report to Parliament,
in which he issues a "solemn and urgent warning" that the
Federal Government is on a path that threatens to wipe out key privacy
rights and, with them, important elements of freedom as we know it.
Key points made by the Commissioner in his Annual Report include the
following:
"The Government is, quite simply, using September 11 as an
excuse for new collections and uses of personal information about all of
us Canadians that cannot be justified by the requirements of
anti-terrorism and that, indeed, have no place in a free and democratic
society."
"I have never once raised privacy objections against a
single actual anti-terrorist security measure I have objected only to
the extension of purported anti-terrorism measures to additional purposes
completely unrelated to anti-terrorism, or to intrusions on privacy whose
relevance or necessity with regard to anti-terrorism has not been in any
way demonstrated. And still the Government is turning a resolutely deaf
ear."
"Specifically, I am referring to: the Canada Customs and
Revenue Agency's new Big Brother passenger database; the provisions
of section 4.82 of Bill C-17; dramatically enhanced state powers to
monitor our communications, as set out in the Lawful Access
consultation paper; a national ID card with biometric identifiers, as
advanced by Citizenship and Immigration Minister Denis Coderre; and the
Governments support of precedent-setting video surveillance of public
streets by the RCMP."
"The CCRAs database introduces the creation of personal
information dossiers on all law-abiding citizens for a wide variety of
investigative purposes. Section 4.82 of Bill C-17 requires, for the first
time, defacto mandatory self-identification to the police for general law
enforcement. The Lawful Access paper advocates the widespread
monitoring of our communications activities and reading habits. A national
ID card would remove our right to anonymity in our day-to-day lives. The
RCMPs video surveillance constitutes systematic observation of citizens
by the police as we go about our law-abiding business on public
streets."
"Now I am informing Parliament that there is every
appearance that governmental disregard for crucially important privacy
rights is moving beyond isolated instances and becoming systematic. This
puts a fundamental right of every Canadian profoundly at risk. It is a
trend that urgently needs to be reversed."
"The situation is made all the more worrisome by the fact
that the Government is doing all this in blatant, open and repeated
disregard of the concerns that it is my duty to express as the Officer of
Parliament mandated to oversee and defend the privacy rights of all
Canadians If the Government can, with impunity and without provoking
the strongest response from Parliament, simply brush aside the Privacy
Commissioners warnings and do as it pleases, then privacy protection in
this country will be progressively weakened, and worse and worse
intrusions will be inevitable."
"Regrettably, this Government has lost its moral compass
with regard to the fundamental human right of privacy."
"If someone intrudes on our privacy by peering into our
home, going through the personal things in our office desk, reading over
our shoulder on a bus or airplane, or eavesdropping on our conversation
we feel uncomfortable, even violated. Imagine, then, how we will feel
if it becomes routine for bureaucrats, police officers and other agents of
the state to paw through all the details of our lives: where and when we
travel, and with whom; who are the friends and acquaintances with whom we
have telephone conversations or e-mail correspondence; what we are
interested in reading or researching; where we like to go and what we like
to do."
"A popular response is: If you have nothing to hide, you
have nothing to fear. By that reasoning, of course, we shouldnt mind
if the police were free to come into our homes at any time just to look
around, if all our telephone conversations were monitored, if all our mail
were read, if all the protections developed over centuries were swept
away. Its only a difference of degree from the intrusions already being
implemented or considered."
"We must guard against falling prey to the illusion that
wholesale erosion of privacy is a reasonable, necessary or effective way
to enhance security. We must guard against the demonstrated tendency of
the Government to create new databases of privacy-invasive information on
justified, exceptional grounds of enhancing security, and then seek to use
that information for a whole range of other law enforcement or
governmental purposes that have nothing to do with anti-terrorism - simply
because it's there. And we must guard against the eagerness of law
enforcement bodies and other agencies of the state to use the response to
September 11 as a Trojan horse for acquiring new invasive powers or
abolishing established safeguards simply because it suits them to do
so."
"Even with the help and support of my provincial and
territorial colleagues, other privacy advocates and many thoughtful
members of the news media to all of whom I am profoundly grateful
as an ombudsman I do not have the power to stop what the Government is
doing in its unprecedented assault on privacy. That power lies in
Parliamentary insistence and public outcry. It is my hope that these will
be exercised with the greatest urgency."
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The Commissioners 2001-2002 Annual Report to Parliament is
available on-line at www.privcom.gc.ca
and in hard copy via the Parliamentary Press Gallery. For more
information, please contact Anne-Marie Hayden, Media Relations, Office of
the Privacy Commissioner of Canada, tel: (613) 995-0103 or e-mail: [email protected]