Public Health Agency launches intelligence team to prepare for future pandemics - Action News
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Public Health Agency launches intelligence team to prepare for future pandemics

The Public Health Agency of Canada has assembled a dedicated intelligence and security team to better prepare for future pandemics, CBC News has learned. The move follows the auditor general's scathing criticism back in the spring of the Liberal government's changes to the country's Global Pandemic Health Intelligence Network.

The move comes after a scathing auditor general's report on Canada's pandemic preparations

Security personnel keep watch outside the Wuhan Institute of Virology during a visit by the World Health Organization (WHO) team tasked with investigating the origins of the coronavirus disease inWuhan, China on February 3, 2021. (Thomas Peter/Reuters)

The Public Health Agency of Canada has quietly reorganized its internal divisions and assembled a security and intelligence section tasked with providing better, faster warnings of future pandemics, CBC News has learned.

The creation of the intelligence division part of a widespread reconfiguration of teams within the agency comes in response to pointed criticism of PHAC's early pandemic response in 2020.

Government sourceswith knowledge of the filesaid the pandemic led to aninflux of new personnel and resources, makingit necessary to revamp PHAC'sorganizational structure. CBC News is not identifying the confidential sources because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

As many as 1,000 staff members from all backgrounds and disciplineshave been hired at Health Canadasince the pandemic began, said one of the sources.

A series of detailed questions about the initiative was put toPHACon Monday. Late Wednesday, officials responded by confirming the reorganization; they refused to provide details onhow the security and intelligence team will be organized.

Back in thespring,Auditor GeneralKaren Hogan released a blisteringreport onthe Liberal government's handling of the Global Pandemic Health Intelligence Network (GPHIN), a multilingual monitoring system that scours the internet for reports of infectious diseases.

The federal government ordered the once-world class intelligence network to focus its attention more on domestic surveillancethan international outbreaks, the auditor reported. The report also took the health agency to task for changes that limited GPHIN's ability to issue crucial pandemic alerts to clients, including provincial governments and international health agencies.

It's notclear what role GPHIN will play in this newsecurity and intelligence division.

The health agency alsohas been criticized for not paying close enough attentionto health intelligence warnings coming from other government agencies, including the military's medical intelligence branch.

'It's a breakthrough'

Wesley Wark, a University of Ottawa professor and one the country's leading intelligence experts, said he's encouraged to see PHAC move to createa more robust intelligence-gathering system.

"It's a breakthrough," he said. "It's a recognition, which has been slow to come from PHAC, that they have to do things differently in the future. There was a lot of defensiveness around the auditor general's report."

He said the agencystill has tostaff the division with talent andbuild bridges with the rest of the intelligence and security community in Canadaand elsewhere.

The decision to establish the new unit comes at a time when governments everywhere are under pressure to improve their health intelligence capabilities. The World Health Organization (WHO) andalliessuch as the United States, Britain and Germany areplanning major pandemic early warning initiatives.

'We lost precious months'

Standing on stage with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at a summit meeting in Brusselslast week, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyensaidthat the world needs more thanvaccines to move on from the current crisis.

"We need better surveillance," she said. "We need to be prepared in the infrastructure.

"It would be good if we worked together and agreed on that to reform the WHO because, in particular, we have to improve the early warning system and we have to improve the investigative powers of the WHO, because we all know we lost precious months at the beginning of the pandemic."

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, right, European Council President Charles Michel, left, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, center, pose after participating in a media conference at the end of an EU-Canada summit at the European Council building in Brussels, Tuesday, June 15, 2021. (Francisco Seco/Associated Press)

When asked by CBC News at the recent G7 summit what measures his governmentwould take to improve Canada'spandemic early warning capabilities, Trudeau gave avagueresponse thatmade no reference to PHAC's initiative.

"There are many things that Canada has been reviewing and working on and we will continue to work to make sure Canadians are protected from any future pandemic," he said.

The United Kingdom, as hostof this year's G7 summit, made preventing another global catastrophe one of the summit'skey themes. The U.K.'s top science adviser, Sir Patrick Vallance, has saidthat an improved earlywarning system would be a critical component of post-pandemic rebuilding efforts.

WHO, which was a big supporter ofCanada's GPHIN, is pushing for countries to cooperate more closely and is calling for a global pandemic preparedness treaty.

"Above all, at the root of the pandemic is a deficit of solidarity and sharing of the data, information, resources, technology and tools that every nation needs to keep its people safe," the WHO's director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told theG7 summit earlier this month.

"WHO believes the best way to close that deficit is with an international agreement a treaty, convention, call it what you will to provide the basis for improved preparedness, detection and response, and for improved cooperation to identify the origins of new pathogens."

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