Parliamentary committee agrees to take on probe of Winnipeg lab scandal - Action News
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Parliamentary committee agrees to take on probe of Winnipeg lab scandal

A parliamentary committee has agreed to question key witnesses about how two scientists studying deadly viruses at a special lab in Winnipeg were able to work closely and covertly with China.

Conservative critic Michael Chong's motion passed unanimously

Workers at Winnipeg's National Microbiology Laboratory wear protective suits designed to keep dangerous microbes out.
Workers at Winnipeg's National Microbiology Laboratory wear protective suits designed to keep dangerous microbes out. (CBC)

A parliamentary committee has agreed to question key witnesses about how two scientists studying deadly viruses at a special lab in Winnipeg were able to work closely and covertly with China.

Conservative MPMichael Chong brought forward a motion to the Canada-China committee Tuesday morning to study the recent release of federal documents related to the dismissal of two scientists Dr. Xiangguo Qiu and her husband Keding Cheng from the National Microbiology Lab.

As aLevel 4 lab, the Winnipeginstitution is cleared towork with some of the most dangerous pathogens in the world.

"I think it's really important that the government get its security policies right so that we don't see another national security breach like we saw at the Winnipeg lab," Chong said after the committee meeting Tuesday.

After a years-long fight over access to information about Qiu and Cheng, the federal governmenttabled hundreds of documents relating to the case last month. They showed that the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) first became suspicious inSeptember 2018after Qiu had been listed as the inventor on aChinese patent that might have contained scientific information produced in Canada.

That triggered a Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) review, which ultimately concluded Qiu had lied and was "intentionally" sharing scientific information and materials with China potentially putting public health in jeopardy.

The intelligence service also said it believed Cheng was not truthful in his interviews and had worked with a restricted visitor at PHAC "who is connected to [China's] People's Liberation Army."

The couple were marched out of the facility in July 2019 and were stripped of their security clearances. Their dismissals were announcedin January2021, triggering concerns about Chinese espionage and leading to heated demands inParliament for more information.

"Thedocuments show that a flag went up in September 2018. We want to understand whether or not that was the first red flag that appeared in the government or if there were earlier red flags that went unheeded and unacted upon," said Chong.

WATCH |Accountability still needed for breaches at Winnipeg lab: Chong

Accountability still needed for breaches at Winnipeg lab: Chong

5 months ago
Duration 2:16
Now that MPs have agreed to further investigate the security breach at Winnipeg's National Microbiology Laboratory, Conservative MP Michael Chong says Canadians could get to hear directly from public health officials and other witnesses as to what happened.

"It took ten months for the government to secure the lab in Winnipeg. Why did it take so long for that to happen? What delayed the the flow of information within the government, the flow of intelligence within the government that prevented the lab from being secured earlier?"

AsCBCNews reported Tuesday, Canada is on the cusp of getting asecond Level 4 lab. The University of Saskatchewan'sVaccine and Infectious Disease Organization (VIDO), home to Canada's Centre for Pandemic Research, is in the midst of renovations so it can handle human and animal pathogens.

"Surely, before we go down the path of of opening up a second Level 4 lab in Canada, we've got to make sure that processes and procedures are in place to protect national security," said Chong.

Chong's motion passed unanimously Tuesdaywith minor tweaks.

The approved motion calls on multiple players to take questions from committee members, including the head of departmental security at PHAC, CSIS director David Vigneault, the prime minister's national security adviser Nathalie Drouin and members of cabinet, including Health Minister Mark Holland and Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc.

The RCMP has been investigating Qiu and Cheng since 2019.

According to reporting by TheGlobe and Mail, Qiu and Cheng are now working in China.

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