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Politics

Conservatives push for emergency meeting after Desjardins privacy breach

Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer is pushing for anemergency Commons committeemeeting in the wake of a massive personal data breach at the Desjardins Group believed to beone of the largest ever among Canadian financial institutions.

Breach affected roughly 2.7 million people and 173,000 businesses

Desjardins President and CEO Guy Cormier responds to a question as Senior Executive Vice-President and Chief Operating Officer Denis Berthiaume looks on during a news conference in Montreal on Thursday, June 20, 2019. Desjardins Group says the personal information of more than 2.9 million of its members has been shared with individuals outside of the organization due to the illegal use of the data by an employee. (Paul Chiasson/Canadian Press)

Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer is pushing for anemergency Commons committeemeeting in the wake of a massive personal data breach at the Desjardins Group believed to beone of the largest ever among Canadian financial institutions.

Last month, the Quebec-based bankrevealed that an employee with "ill-intention" collected information about nearly three million people and businesses and shared it with others.

Desjardinsflagged a suspicious transaction to Laval police in December, but officials said it took several months for them to understand the scope of the scheme.

On Monday,Scheer put out a statement saying he's asked his party's public safety critic, Quebec MP Pierre Paul-Hus, to reach out to the chair of the public safety and national security committee to arrange an emergency meeting for as early as this week.

The House of Commons has risen for the summer break,so a meeting likely would require some MPs to return to Ottawa.

The committee's chair, Liberal MP John McKay, said he's heard also from government MPson the committee who want to meet soon to talk about the Desjardins breach.

"Normally we'd start with a meeting to agree to have a meeting, but I'm hoping to skip that step and arrange a meeting with substance, with witnesses," he said, adding he "personally" would like to bring the committee together next week.

"I don't know if we can pull it off, but I've asked both the government and opposition members for witness lists."

The leaked information includes names, addresses, birthdates, social insurance numbers, email addresses and information about transaction habits.

Tens of thousands of people already have signed a petition asking for new social insurance numbers in the wake of the breach.

"We must act quickly to help the 2.9 million Desjardins members affected by the theft of their personal data.This situation is unacceptable," said Scheer in the statement.

"The federal government must put measures in place to ensure that this situation never happens again."

Scheer said he wants the committee members to look into whether issuing new social insurance numbers is a viable solution for Desjardins members and ways to prevent future data breaches.

With files from CBC Quebec