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Politics

PM says government moving to block members of Iranian regime, IRGC from entering Canada

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his government is taking steps to preventtop members of the Iranian regime including members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) from enteringCanada.

Government also allocating $76M to beef up sanction enforcement

Canada bans top Iranian revolutionary guard members in new sanctions

2 years ago
Duration 1:52
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland announced a new round of sanctions on Iran, banning the top 50 per cent of Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps members from entering Canada.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his government is taking steps to preventtop members of the Iranian regime including members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) from enteringCanada.

Trudeau said the move would affect the top 50 per cent of the IRGC roughly 10,000 members and will bepermanent.

"We are using the most powerful tools at our disposal to crack down on this brutal regime," Trudeau told a press conference Friday.

The move comes after weeks of pressure on the government from opposition MPs and advocates to add the IRGC to Canada's terrorist list.

What the government announced falls short of listing the IRGC as a terrorist entity under the Criminal Code.Instead, the government is using provisions under theImmigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA)to target members of the regime and the IRGC.

Members of Parliament passed a motion in 2018 calling on the government todesignate the IRGC as a terrorist organization. Four years later, it still hasn't done so although the guard's paramilitary Quds Force is already on the list.

WATCH | Trudeau announces $76M for sanctions:

Trudeau announces $76M for sanctions

2 years ago
Duration 1:28
Prime Minister Trudeau announces major funding to 'strengthen Canada's overall capacity to implement sanctions'

Earlier this week, the government slapped sanctions on 34 Iranians and Iranian entities, including members of the IRGCand Iran's morality police.

Trudeau said Friday the government will be expanding those sanctions and willallocate $76 million to boost the government's capacityto seize and freeze the assets of sanctioned entities and establish a new sanctions bureau at Global Affairs Canada.

The Conservative opposition has been amping up the pressure on the government to add the IRGC to the list in recent weeks. Conservative MPs have brought upthe topic up in nearly every question period since Parliament returned last month.

The Association of Families of Flight PS752 Victims also hascalling on Ottawa to add the IRGC to the list of terrorist organizations in response toits role indestroying the civilian aircrafttwo years ago.

Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland insisted Friday thatby taking the steps it has taken, the federal government is recognizing the IRGC as a terrorist entity.

Mehrzad Zarei, centre, listens as his letter for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is read aloud by a fellow protester, second from right in Ottawa on Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022. Zarei is the father of one of the 176 passengers killed onboard a Ukraine International Airlines Flight PS752 crash and marched from Richmond Hill, Ont. to downtown Ottawa in hopes that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will meet with the families of victims. (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press)

"The IRGC is a terrorist organization. Today, by listing the IRGC under IRPA and indeed by listing the broader leadership of the Iranian regime, we are formally recognizing that fact and acting accordingly," she said.

When asked why the government didn't actually add the IRGCto thelist of terrorist entities under the Criminal Code, Trudeau didn't rule out doing so in the future.

"We have looked very, very carefully at all the potential tools and we're not taking any further tools off the table," he said, adding that the IRPAwas usedagainst individuals in Rwanda and Bosnia in the 1990s.

Designating an organization as a terrorist entity under the Criminal Code can have serious criminal and financial consequences.Under section 83 of theCode, it is an indictable offence to "collect property ... provide or invite a person to provide, or make available property or financial or other related services" to a terrorist entity.

The designation also allows banks to freeze assets and permits police to charge thosewho financially or materially supportsuch a group.

Iranian-Canadian lawyer and human rights activist Kaveh Shahroozsaid Friday's announcement was "underwhelming."

"Making 10,000 membersof the IRGCinadmissible to Canada is good, but it doesn't go far enough and I don't think it recognizes the sheer monstrosity of this organization," Shahrooz said.

WATCH | Critics react to government's new measures against Iranian regime:

Critics react to governments new measures against Iranian regime

2 years ago
Duration 10:02
Conservative Party deputy leader Tim Uppal says the government failed Canadians by not listing the IRGC as a terrorist entity. The NDPs foreign affairs critic Heather McPherson says the government is not doing enough.

But University of Ottawa professorThomas Juneau, who studies Iranian politics,saidFriday's announcement is likely to havefar more of animpact than adding the IRGCto the terrorist list as long as the government is able to enforce the measures.

Specifically, Juneau said, the measures could prevent the Iranian government from laundering money in Canada and thwart its efforts toharass Iranian-Canadians.

"Intheory, Friday's announcement includes useful tools to try and counter these activities. Inpractice, the proof will be in the pudding," Juneau said in an interview withCBC Radio's The House, airing Saturday.

WATCH | Government announces new measures against Iranian regime leadership:

Government announces new measures against Iranian regime leadership

2 years ago
Duration 5:58
Were going to leave all options on the table, said Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino. The governments announcement included banning IRGC senior officials and members from entering Canada, and preventing Iranian regime leaders from holding assets in this country.

Juneau also argued that adding the IRGC to the terrorist list would bedifficult to enforceand could haveunintended effects, such as preventing Iranian-Canadians from sending money home to their families.

Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino's office said previously that adding an organization to the terrorist listis not up to politicians.

"Determining whether a group constitutes a terrorist entity is a careful, non-political process undertaken by Canada's national security agencies," spokesperson Alexander Cohen said in an email to The Canadian Press in September.

"These agencies are continuously working to identify and assess entities that may meet the threshold for listing."

WATCH | Trudeau says Canada will be pursuing IRGC as terrorist organization:

Canada pursuing Iran's IRGC as a terrorist organization

2 years ago
Duration 2:39
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announces Canada will be pursuing Iran's IRGC as a terrorist organization.

Former Canadian Security Intelligence Service officer Jessica Davis told CBC that adding the IRGC to the list would be a difficult process.

"This is a technocratic process in which the RCMP and CSIS produce intelligence reports making a recommendation to the minister about whether or not a group should be listed," she said, adding that it's notclear if the IRGC would meet the threshold used by those governmental bodies.

Shahrooz agreed that adding the IRGC to the list would notbe an easy process. He said it should still be pursued.

Davis questionedthe government's ability to enforce the IRPAmeasures announced today. She described the claim that the government hassufficientinformation on 10,000 members of the IRGCas "farfetched."

With files from the Canadian Press and Evan Dyer