House of Commons Hansard #116 of the 36th Parliament, 2nd Session. (The original version is on Parliament's site.) The word of the day was banks.

Topics

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

7:30 p.m.

Liberal

Anne McLellan Liberal Edmonton West, AB

Mr. Speaker, as I said earlier today, and I will reiterate, the solicitor general and I will be sending our officials to Quebec tomorrow to meet with their counterparts. They will meet with other provincial counterparts. You may shake your head, but let me say that officials in Quebec have done some very good work in relation to how we can amend the provisions in the criminal code without using the notwithstanding clause to make them more effective.

Unlike you, I would actually like to know about that work. I would like that work shared with provincial and territorial colleagues to see if we are able to put in place—

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

7:30 p.m.

The Speaker

I would remind you, hon. colleagues, to include me, rather than speaking to each other. I am feeling a little lonely up here. I know you are just coming back after the summer. The time for questions and comments is over.

Before the hon. member for Langley—Abbotsford begins his debate, I would ask if he is going to take 20 minutes.

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

7:30 p.m.

Reform

Randy White Reform Langley—Abbotsford, BC

Mr. Speaker, I will be taking 20 minutes and you know I will address my comments through you. I would not be like the justice minister.

It is a pleasure to talk about this issue tonight. It is interesting the comments we get from the government side. Let me quote the justice minister today and the solicitor general tonight. The justice minister said that organized crime is the number one priority of the government.

It is ironic that it is the number one priority today, when we heard very little about it last week, last year and on and on. Why is it that with this government it seems that the number one priority begins when something moves it to move in that direction? It is really sad indeed that all of a sudden we are here in the House in a special debate when something that set it off was a reporter who was shot in the back five times in Quebec.

I remind the government that there have been things going on for years in this country that have been involved with organized crime. I remind the government that last year alone 400 people died in two cities, Vancouver and Toronto, from drug overdoses. Those drugs came from organized crime up at the top. The year before that there was well over 300 in Vancouver alone, and there is the year before that and the year before that. So why is it we are here today, the first day of the sitting of the House of Commons, in an emergency debate, when this has been an emergency for years? Yes, the government has developed laws, but they have not worked. That is the main message we are trying to get across.

I know the government is saying it will examine it and that it is studying it, but the time for study has past. This has been a problem for a long time.

Some of the responsibility for this has to lay at the feet of the government because whatever action is going to come out of this exercise could have and should have been done some time ago in my opinion. The comments from the solicitor general tonight were “We will not tolerate this”. “This is my highest priority,” he said.

We have been telling the solicitor general for years there is a serious problem in the prisons. There is a serious problem with parole. But on Monday, September 18, 2000, the highest priority is organized crime because something happened to move the government in that direction. That is not the way to run a country or a government, in a reactionary mode.

There is much talk about the Hell's Angels and the Rock Machine in Quebec. I remind the government and others listening that one only has to live around the triads in British Columbia to know how deadly a group those people are, how ruthless they are. We only have to go to Manitoba to understand what the Warriors are like. There is the Satan's Choice in Ontario, the Para-Dice Riders, the Vietnamese gangs, the Big Circle Boys and on and on they go. It is not about two groups. It would be a mistake to identify two groups in particular in the criminal code because that excludes a lot more than it includes. That is important to remember.

I would like to know why two or three years ago the government eliminated the ports police. We were told at the time it was a cost cutting measure. I spent a good deal of time with the ports police. I know the role they played on both coasts, in Halifax harbour port in particular and in Vancouver. It is interesting. Almost immediately after the ports police left Vancouver, one of the organized crime groups immediately moved into the Vancouver port and set up operations.

How does organized crime benefit? How does it expand? It expands by eliminating organizations like the ports police, or cost cutting in the RCMP. I wish I could have a debate here with the solicitor general on what the government did with the RCMP budget. It was only a year or two ago in the House when we were practically begging the government to give the RCMP money. In fact, after all that duress the solicitor general was under, he finally gave in and gave it money, which he is bragging about here tonight. That is reactionary mode. It is not good for the country.

I have some examples of what organized crime really is. I want to read them into the record for the House. People across the country will understand just how serious organized crime is.

The Big Circle Boys is another group. Triad member Wing Fu Ha was arrested in Vancouver for the murder of an infant in what police suspect was a gang rivalry incident. Wing remained in Vancouver despite an earlier deportation order against him.

I will have some recommendations a little later on what to do, but I can tell the House I have dealt with this personally as well. One of the problems with organized crime is the lack of strength and conviction of the Liberal government to deport people who break our laws. That is a fact. I just read of one of them here, a triad member. He should have been out a long time ago.

Contrary to the unanimous advice of law enforcement, the ports police were disbanded and immediately thereafter an organized crime linked company was granted docking container facilities in the port of Vancouver. The amount and quality of heroin now available in Vancouver is such that in August of 2000, heroin addicts, that is, those who have not died, marched to protest government inaction. Heroin addicts are saying there is too much heroin on the streets. That is a fact. I have been there. I have seen it. I have talked to them.

In June 1999, more than a year ago, Vancouver police cracked a heroin importation ring run by Simon Kwok, whom they identify as a member of the 14K triad group, responsible for drug importation, prostitution, credit card fraud, home invasion, and extortion of members of Vancouver's large Chinese community.

That is what an individual like that does. That is organized crime. That is reality. That hits the streets of my community every day, and everyone else's community, including Halifax, right across the country.

We know about the ongoing violent warfare between the Rock Machine and the Hell's Angels in Quebec resulting in shootings, bombings and more deaths, but here is what is not said about that. A fellow, Michel Auger, a decent individual, a professional in his own rank, gets five bullets in the back. I read that a couple of days ago in Halifax a fellow was shot twice.

Shootings like that are an everyday occurrence in the country now. What happened to the government's gun legislation? The major comment we had in the House of Commons when that legislation came in was that it would help to curb crime, but that is not the case. It has become a revenue generator.

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

7:40 p.m.

Liberal

Peter Adams Liberal Peterborough, ON

Rubbish.

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

7:45 p.m.

Reform

Randy White Reform Langley—Abbotsford, BC

Mr. Speaker, one of the Liberals is saying “rubbish”. The fact is that Bill C-68, which brought in the gun law, did not help Michel Auger did it? It did not help five people in one night in my riding two years ago. Who is it helping?

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

7:45 p.m.

Liberal

Peter Adams Liberal Peterborough, ON

Mr. Speaker, 80% of deaths are from hunting rifles.

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

7:45 p.m.

Reform

Randy White Reform Langley—Abbotsford, BC

They do not like to hear this across on the other side.

Violent episodes of shootings and bombings between Vietnamese and various triad gangs occur on an ongoing basis in Vancouver, Edmonton and Toronto. The 1998 solicitor general's report confirmed that organized crime was responsible for the illegal entry into Canada of approximately 16,000 people annually; money laundering in excess of $10 billion a year, which costs Canadians in excess of $10 billion a year; attempts to influence or corrupt public officials which is expected to occur in Canada and in fact even commented on by the new commissioner of the RCMP; and the illegal entry into Canada of persons claiming refugee status who subsequently become involved in organized crime activities.

The Toronto police busted a prostitution ring run by the Big Circle Boys triad involving young Chinese and Asian women brought illegally into the country and forced into prostitution.

The reason I gave those examples is to ask a question of the other side. The Liberals said that they brought in this law and that law, but what have those laws done to stop this? This is occurring every single day in our country and all we have heard thus far from the solicitor general and the justice minister is “We will not tolerate it. It is our highest priority. We will re-examine it”.

We also heard that improved legislative tools are necessary. We may agree with that but thus far we have seen an escalation of organized crime in just about every area that it can get into. What has legislation really done in the past?

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

7:45 p.m.

Liberal

Lawrence MacAulay Liberal Cardigan, PE

Why does the member not bring up the drug busts?

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

7:45 p.m.

Reform

Randy White Reform Langley—Abbotsford, BC

The solicitor general wants me to bring up the drug busts. If I brought up the drug busts I could assure him they are minor compared to the amounts of drugs that are sold to our children. They are very minor indeed.

In Vancouver, the Province newspaper has confirmed that the RCMP has listed Stanley Ho as the lead member of the triad organized crime group since 1991. Despite this, Ho has received multiple visitor visas, has extensive holdings in Canada, is a donor, personally and corporately, to the Liberal Party, and has actually hosted a cocktail reception for the Prime Minister during the Vancouver APEC conference. That information was in the paper and I trust it to be accurate.

I am in no way suggesting that there is an attachment. What I am suggesting is that known organized crime agents are entering and leaving this country on a regular basis. The government knows that and I know the immigration department knows that. The only thing that happens is that the criminals get caught in a legal wrangle, in appeal after appeal, if they even are asked to be deported. It is not working.

No legislation has been mentioned by the immigration minister. The justice minister and the solicitor general are here. The immigration minister should also be standing up in the House to say that we have some problems and that we need some legislation but that has not been done. The finance minister or the revenue minister should be standing up in the House saying “Under the Income Tax Act we should make it easier to seize assets and sell them”. It is just not two people in this. The whole government has to sit down and look at this situation. It is not sending two, three or four people to Quebec. It is a lot bigger than that.

I recognize what the provincial and territorial justice ministers are saying, but that is not the point. The point is that I do not think the government is co-ordinated in its effort. It is futile in my mind to take a section out of the criminal code, section 467.1, and make an adjustment to it in the hope that this will all go away. It is a lot bigger than that.

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

7:50 p.m.

Liberal

John McKay Liberal Scarborough East, ON

Use the notwithstanding clause.

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

7:50 p.m.

Reform

Randy White Reform Langley—Abbotsford, BC

If the member had been listening, I did not say use the notwithstanding clause. One of the government's problems is that it does not listen too well. That is why it is in the fix it is in today.

There are quotes from an RCMP report detailing triad and Russian Mafia control of bringing young women from eastern Europe into Canada for prostitution and exotic dancing using illegal entry, visitor visas and refugee claims. I again get back to the comment that this is just not a justice-solicitor general issue. Many of these issues come back to immigration into Canada, open borders and the refusal to refuse people coming in.

I want to make a statement and pose a question at the same time. I heard the justice minister's answer a while ago when I asked the question about plea bargaining. While I am not a lawyer and do not want to be, I can understand and appreciate that there are differences between federal and provincial legal systems, whereas the administration of the courts are within provincial jurisdiction. However, there has to be some way the federal government can influence the courts in a province to prevent such plea bargaining from taking place. The difficulty with plea bargaining in many cases is that the only person who gets hurt is the victim. That is a fact.

It seems to me that if we have laws that are going to be worth anything, to allow the legal industry in a courtroom to take away what just might be the answer, a consecutive sentence for being a member of organized crime, is a shame. I think the concentration for the solicitor general and for the justice minister should be in that area; apply the laws. That is all Canadians are asking for.

I had a number of recommendations, and I suppose I have covered most of them, but I will give a couple more. We have to create a mandatory minimum five year jail term for smuggling or criminally exploiting illegal immigrants into Canada. We have to prohibit conditional release of any kind for an offender ordered deported. We have to amend the Immigration Act to require the deportation of a person found to be a member of an organized criminal group, among many other things that I have mentioned.

If there is one thing the justice minister and the solicitor general take away tonight, I hope it is that we in Canada are looking for action and not more studies. Once a law is a law it must be applied in our courts for a change.

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

7:55 p.m.

Liberal

John Bryden Liberal Wentworth—Burlington, ON

Mr. Speaker, I have great respect for the member who just spoke. He is an excellent parliamentarian. I would like to ask him a question that I wanted to ask either the solicitor general or the justice minister but I could not because of time constraints.

The question is both at the same time the easiest and the hardest in this debate. The question is quite simple. The solicitor general is the chief policeman of the country. Canada's tradition is that our police are responsible for upholding the law. That is the fundamental charge that we give our police.

Finally, the ultimate law in Canada is the charter of rights and freedoms. Does it not therefore follow that whatever we do and whatever steps we take that the justice minister, the solicitor general and this parliament must protect the principles of the charter of rights and freedoms?

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

7:55 p.m.

Reform

Randy White Reform Langley—Abbotsford, BC

Mr. Speaker, the difficulty we have with the charter is the many rulings within it in the courtrooms. We only have to look at child pornography to see that.

The reason it is necessary to have a notwithstanding clause in there is because what has been put into the generalized charter of rights and freedoms has been misinterpreted by the judiciary. Most court cases today are brought on by lawyers on behalf of clients who want to interpret this and are moving in that direction. The notwithstanding clause is an absolute necessity.

As far as the charter of rights and freedoms is concerned, I do not have a problem with it other than the misinterpretation by the judiciary, which is where the major flaw has existed over the last 12 years. It has become a fad in the courtroom to go after it and amend it.

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

7:55 p.m.

Reform

Garry Breitkreuz Reform Yorkton—Melville, SK

Mr. Speaker, I will try to make my question as brief as possible, although I have some background information I would like to read.

I am sure the House will recall that back in 1995 we passed a bill known as Bill C-68 which required the registration of all firearms in Canada. What Bill C-68 essentially does is it lays a piece of paper beside every gun in the country. That law is not yet fully implemented. Less than 25% of the firearms in Canada have registration certificates beside them. In fact, that percentage could even be below 10% if we could get the information from the government.

Back in 1995 a man by the name of Bob Runciman, the Ontario solicitor general, made a statement before the committee. I will read it to the House because I think it is very indicative of the missed priorities of the government. Mr. Runciman said:

Our position is that the sections of Bill C-68 that provide for compulsory registration of all firearms will divert police resources from more important tasks. Those sections (of Bill C-68) will reduce the number of officers and the amount of money available to deal with serious crime. They will make the real task of gun control more difficult and more dangerous for the police officers who undertake it. And those provisions will ultimately have no significant impact on violent crime, or the use of firearms by violent criminals.

He then went on to say that if we were to spend $500 million on this registry we could put 5,900 more police on the street. Those 5,900 extra police on the street would make a significant impact on that. What is happening today?

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

7:55 p.m.

Reform

Randy White Reform Langley—Abbotsford, BC

Mr. Speaker, I know where my colleague is coming from and he makes a very good point.

One of the things we are missing here already, and which has not come up in the discussion about organized crime, is that when a murder takes place in Canada it is usually done with a gun.

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

8 p.m.

Waterloo—Wellington Ontario

Liberal

Lynn Myers LiberalParliamentary Secretary to Solicitor General of Canada

Mr. Speaker, I can say that as a former head of the Waterloo Regional Police Force with 700 police officers and knowing where the chiefs of police stand and where the rank and file for the most part stand, Mr. Runciman was wrong in 1995 and he is wrong now.

What we have heard from the party opposite is nothing more than fearmongering and scare tactics. We saw Mr. Day in the House today. Imagine, there were spouts of water flowing and other things. He wants to bring a new tone of civility into the House. What we see from the member opposite is nothing but. What we see is the kind of code words for anti-immigration and code words that bring the race card into play. We saw that happening. Look at the last names of the people mentioned in the transcripts. Is the new tone of civility where the Alliance Party is really going?

I ask the members opposite, because they are always caterwauling away about gun control, to name me one victims group in Canada that supports their position when it comes to gun control. The reason I ask the question is that they repeatedly go out of their way to say they are on the side of victims and they are on the side of victims' rights. What I want to hear from them is the name of one group of victims that supports their position. I know the answer to that. There is not one.

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

8 p.m.

Reform

Randy White Reform Langley—Abbotsford, BC

Mr. Speaker, it is interesting that the hon. member said that. I was the original writer of the national victims' bill of rights. It is a sad commentary coming from the other side.

This is the problem when we try to debate issues like this. Accusations come across on a racial ground. I certainly did not indicate anything like that. It is sad when we try to get our points across to the solicitor general and the justice minister, who are obviously listening because I saw them writing notes, that some backbencher would stand up and tell us that we have an ulterior motive. I have no ulterior motive here. The fact is that when these members on the other side do not have a legitimate argument within debate, we get these kinds of—

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

8 p.m.

The Speaker

Order, please. I ask hon. members to listen to one another.

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

8 p.m.

Reform

Randy White Reform Langley—Abbotsford, BC

I am glad to continue with the civility in the House of Commons rather than listening to that.

I want to say that in all honesty I stood up here tonight to try to provide what I thought were at least motivating suggestions to the two people of the four or five who are responsible for this. That is what is necessary. I am sad that it deteriorated into something less.

My bottom line and the message is that we have been waiting for change for years. Drug addiction in this country and the tens of thousands of young people on drugs did not just happen. It has been happening for years. It is not time to start studying this. It is not time for the government to say that it is its number one priority today. That was 10 years ago. Now it is time to take some concrete action. I sincerely hope that within this Chamber tonight the government listens to the suggestions we are making, rather than accepts our comments as some kind of terrible criticism that nobody should make.

Our job is to give suggestions in a concrete way and that is what we will do whether the Liberals like it or not.

Organized CrimeEmergency Debate

8:05 p.m.

Bloc

Gilles Duceppe Bloc Laurier—Sainte-Marie, QC

Mr. Speaker, the attack on reporter Michel Auger a few days ago was the straw that broke the camel's back.

There are many reasons why Quebecers have had enough of the rule of terror that criminal organizations, biker gangs and other groups impose upon our society, in Quebec as well as in Canada. I am talking more specifically about the situation in Quebec since it affects us directly.

I was reading a report that was released yesterday by the federal Department of Justice. I assume our colleagues opposite would be interested in such a report. The report tells us that witnesses, jurors and lawyers have been threatened by these groups. I will add that parliamentarians have also been threatened by these groups.

There have been 150 victims in Quebec over the last five years, 30 of whom were innocent victims, men, women and children who had the misfortune of being in the wrong place at the wrong time, who just happened to be nearby when a bomb went off. Thirty innocent victims.

The recently appointed RCMP commissioner, Mr. Zaccardelli, expressed some fears with regard to the corruption of politicians. This is not coming from me, but from the head of the RCMP.

The number of such organizations has increased since 1995. Even after passage of Bill C-95 in 1997, we saw the number of biker gangs in Canada increase from 28 to 35. Is this not evidence that we do not have the necessary tools to address the problem? What should we do to deal with this situation? Remain passive? Talk?

I think our duty as parliamentarians—because we do have duties to fulfill—is to stand up and respond to the call of the public.

Some have said we are doing this to score political points. This is certainly not true in the case of the Bloc Quebecois. We have been raising this issue in the House for years, since 1993. Obviously we have made some gains: it is thanks to the Bloc Quebecois that $1,000 bills have been taken out of circulation.

Mr. Speaker, you and I have never had pockets full of $1,000 bills, but those people count their money by weighing hockey bags on a scale. Thousand dollar bills take up less room. That is exactly what has happened, and the hon. member across the way ought to realize that there is nothing funny about it. He may think it funny, but the victims did not.

No, we do not have any vote-seeking motives. We are, moreover, not the only ones calling for this; the Bloc Quebecois motion is supported by the government of Quebec, Quebec Liberal Party leader Jean Charest, as well as the government of Ontario, the Sûreté du Québec, the Canadian Police Association, the Quebec Press Council—not a repressive body—the Fédération professionnelle des journalistes du Québec, the Montreal Urban Community Police Department, and the NDP governments of Saskatchewan and Manitoba. These are not all nasty sovereignists who are seeking to take advantage of a situation in order to gain votes.

This is a serious problem, and perhaps it is high time there was some realization of this over on the other side of the House.

What does our motion say? We will be coming back to it. Today will not see an end to it. This late night debate is not going to do away with it when there is no provision for a vote. We are not afraid to vote, we are not afraid to stand up, we are not afraid to say what we think. We will never be afraid, and we will be back with it. There will be other opportunities, and it will be moved again here, in the House.

With the support of all of the opposition parties, I would remind hon. members, the motion refers to “making it a crime to belong to a criminal organization, if necessary—I emphasize that it is “if necessary”—invoking the notwithstanding clause of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.”

That created quite a stir among the Liberals. This reminds me of a headline that I recently saw in an Ontario newspaper. I could not believe it. The constitutional rights of the Hell's Angels were violated by the Ontario police because these people have rights.

I can just imagine the Prime Minister delivering a speech at the UN to tell them about the best country in the world and saying “In our country our democracy is so developed that even the Hell's Angels have constitutional rights, and so do the Rock Machines and the Outlaws”.

Is it not nice that, in Canada, these groups have constitutional rights? Our democracy is so advanced that these people have constitutional rights. But the government does not even want to think about using something legal. The notwithstanding clause is in the charter, but the government will not use it against criminal groups. That would lower the level of democracy in Canada, since the Hell's Angels are entitled to their constitutional rights, just like the Rock Machines.

Go tell the mother of young Daniel Desrochers that you are not even considering using that clause because of the constitutional rights of the Hell's Angels. This is unbelievable. It is ridiculous, but the result is also dreadful.

The Liberals' attitude is deplorable. First of all, the Prime Minister, worse than ever—and this is saying something—says “They want me to meddle in provincial jurisdictions by intervening on the criminal code”. But, good God, for someone who was the Minister of Justice and has been here for over 35 years and is the Prime Minister, not to know that the criminal code is under federal jurisdiction—I will believe anything, but not that. Unless he does not know this. It is true he did not know that he does not pay employment insurance. But he knows about the criminal code. Meddling in the affairs of the provinces is his greatest joy. For once this is his jurisdiction and he does not intervene.

Subsequently, the Liberals refused to debate the motion now before us because it was a votable item. In other words, it is fine to talk, debate, discourse but certainly not to take a stand, because the constitutional rights of the Hell's Angels are too important.

However, these people solidly support the young offenders. When it comes to imprisoning children of 10 or 12 years of age, they are brave. Come on kids, we are going to put you in the corner. Instead of a spanking, it is off to prison you go. However, on the subject of the Hell's Angels, the Rock Machine and so on, they are fearful, silent, they hide, they say “We must not touch the constitutional rights of the Hell's Angels and the Rock Machine. Never mind what they do, they have rights. That would be lowering the level of democracy”.

Is that a responsible attitude? Is that the way a responsible parliamentarian should behave? In the case of young offenders, Quebec asked that the legislation be left as it was because it was working. The results prove it. The government is doing the opposite. Our request this time is based on our expertise. If there is more pressure in Quebec—and the federal report says there is—it is because the police are taking tougher action against these groups. It is not just a coincidence. The Liberals are reacting because they know that we do not have all the resources we need, while they are sitting pretty. In this case, they are imposing it on Quebec.

What does the motion say? Does it say that the notwithstanding clause must be used? Absolutely not. We are asking the government to consider acting on our proposal to make membership in such groups a criminal offence and, if legislation is not a possibility, to consider the notwithstanding clause.

The notwithstanding clause is part of the charter. It was not Quebec that imposed the notwithstanding clause. We signed nothing. It was the provinces of English Canada which would not have agreed to the charter without the notwithstanding clause. Now that it is available, they do not want to use it. The constitutional rights of the Hell's Angels are more important.

We cannot accept this state of affairs. What am I going to tell the young men and women in my riding who are prostituting themselves because they are drug addicts, the victims of these groups? I am going to tell them that the Minister of Justice loves and understands them, but that she does not wish to use the notwithstanding clause.

According to the members opposite, the constitutional rights of the Hell's Angels are more important than the fate of these young people.

What am I going to tell restaurant owners in my riding who are paying protection money? What am I going to tell all the innocent victims? The Hell's Angels have constitutional rights.

The minister is shaking her head. Well, for God's sake, if what I just said is not right, can you tell me what is? I am right. Because they refuse to consider the notwithstanding clause, they oppose our motion. It is sheer hypocrisy and nothing else.

What should we say to the families of the victims? “Our prayers are with you, Mrs. Desrochers. We may go sing a song for you, free of charge”. But there is no way we can infringe upon the constitutional rights of the Hell's Angels. They are too important. This is the standard by which our democracy will be judged.

Democracy is such a beautiful thing when the constitutional rights of these gangs supersede the fate of our young people who represent our future. The constitutional rights of the Hell's Angels, what more can we say.

There is much more to be done, of course. We now have a subcommittee. After two years of hard work by the Bloc a subcommittee on organized crime was set up. Yet there are many other aspects to consider. I can think of international ramifications, money laundering, and interference in legal businesses, because these criminals create legal businesses with their dirty money. It is hard to believe what they have achieved, on which boards of directors they sit, which business circles and which political circles they have penetrated. That takes time.

But, in the meantime, what are we telling future victims? Some future victims are listening to us tonight. Some young people will use drugs tonight. Not a word. We do not think about that. Because, you see, the constitutional rights of Hell's Angels are at stake.

We do not want to use a tool that we have at our disposal. We are refusing to use it. Is Canadian democracy not wonderful? We are going to deprive ourselves of this tool.

The objective is not to use this clause. We are not saying that this clause will necessarily be used. We are saying that it will be used if necessary. If there is no other way, what should we do? Should we just give in or should we tell people that there is no other way? Should we tell them that we have thought about it long and hard, but that we would have had to use the notwithstanding clause and that is against our principles?

Some countries have done it. I am thinking of France in particular. France is not a dictatorship. It has a law against criminal gangs with penalties of up to ten years imprisonment, if I am not mistaken. Have any of the labour unions disappeared since then? Are there not protest groups on every issue in France? Were those who blocked the roads arrested because it could be criminal? Come on, it is ridiculous. We know full well who this law is for. Because such groups have rights, is their existence a measure of our democracy?

These are the questions we must ask because our democracy is being attacked on all fronts, including on the political front. Threats have been made to some members of parliament. The RCMP commissioner tells us that attempts have been made to corrupt some people and perhaps there is some corruption.

The power of the judiciary is being attacked through threats made against witnesses, lawyers and jurors. Threatened is the word the report uses. The attack on Michel Auger was an attack on the freedom of the press. There has also been an attack on Jean-Pierre Charbonneau, now the speaker of the Quebec National Assembly. Our economic institutions are also in danger because the clean money that is created by money laundering becomes dirty money as well. That is a self-evident truth.

But these people have been creeping slowly ahead. They have front men. The small fry are arrested while others are strutting around openly in society. Some of them have what they call “filthy few” tattoos on their shoulder. If the minister is not aware of this, let her come to my riding. To earn that tattoo a person has to have killed someone. These killers are grouped together as the “filthy few”. If a Liberal over there wants to play at being one, let him just get such a tattoo and spend ten minutes on Sainte-Catherine in the east end. Those would be his last ten minutes on earth.

We know these people and we know what they do. If anyone does not know what the Rock Machines, the Outlaws, the Devil's Disciples, the Hell's Angels are, they must be from another planet. These are not clubs where people get together to play cards or go bowling. We know what they are involved in.

Of course, the former minister—I do not believe the present one would serve up this pontification totally devoid of logic—said that people are not being attacked for who they are, but what they do. I am telling you that these people act the way they do because of who they are. That is as simple as that, and those who do not understand this are off track.

Who is the charter made for? For those groups or for law-abiding citizens? Can we not take the United Nations charter as an example? Section 20 refers to the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association. Someone would have to prove to me that these are peaceful groups. The burden of proof is on you to show us that these are pacific groups.

People are not arrested because of who they are, but because of what they do. I am telling you that this government will be judged on its actions. Which side will it take? That of the constitutional rights of the Hell's Angels or the Rock Machine or that of young people, the future and democracy?

People demand that we take a firm stand. They cannot accept those meaningless, sophisticated and pontificating speeches which are perfectly useless. We do not accept that. This fight will continue; those people will soon be made accountable.

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8:20 p.m.

Liberal

John Bryden Liberal Wentworth—Burlington, ON

Mr. Speaker, I am a former journalist. As a journalist, I know that the most famous journalist in Canada and Quebec was René Lévesque.

He was a journalist who defended human rights here in Canada and abroad. I admired René Lévesque. He was the veritable image of a journalist, with a cigarette hanging out of his mouth and a good sense of humour. He was a very honest man who understood well what it was to be a journalist.

Quebec is proposing that the right to freedom of association be limited. I wonder what René Lévesque would have thought of this proposal to limit the rights included in the charter of rights and freedoms.

How does the hon. member think René Lévesque, who defended all these rights, would have reacted?

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Bloc

Gilles Duceppe Bloc Laurier—Sainte-Marie, QC

Mr. Speaker, I have often noticed that admiration for René Lévesque has unfortunately been much greater here since his death than when he was alive.

That having been said, these are the same Liberals who did not hesitate to steal membership lists for the party led by René Lévesque at the time—

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8:20 p.m.

An hon. member

They set fires.

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Bloc

Gilles Duceppe Bloc Laurier—Sainte-Marie, QC

—who did not hesitate to set fire to barns, and worse yet—

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Some hon. members

Oh, oh.