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Accès licite
Lawful Access
Bill C-13: Tories trying again to open door to undue state intrusion
The Toronto Star 26/03/2014 - If at first you don't succeed, try, try, try again. Perhaps that's the federal government's motto regarding Bill C-13 - the Protecting Canadians from Online Crime Act. It represents yet another attempt by this government to pass legislation that will open the door to undue state intrusion. The currently proposed legislation is a more palatable but still troubling restatement of the unpopular Bill C-30 - the Protecting Children from Internet Predators Act. That bill, tabled in February 2012, mentioned neither children nor predators and was likely so-named only to sway the public toward accepting the legislation. It attempted to do precious little of what its title purported, mostly dealing with giving the police new powers - including making it mandatory for Internet service providers to disclose subscriber information to police without court oversight. The public saw through the rhetoric and the outcry was immediate. Organizations opposing undue state intrusion on individual liberties recognized this as an unwarranted expansion of police powers to snoop on Canadians. The outcry was merited. After all, the best way to evaluate legislation is to examine how it can be abused, not what the government says its goals are. In the end, Bill C-30's flaws were too great and it never reached a second reading in the House of Commons. With Bill C-13, the government is at it again. Read more - Lire plusCanada's telecoms have built databases for police spying: Geist
Huffington Port 26/03/2014 - Canada's telecoms appear to be building databases of subscriber information that law enforcement agencies can access without a warrant, according to documents released under access to information laws. The news comes as Parliament once again gears up to debate the merits of giving police greater access to telecom subscriber data. The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) accessed  telecom subscriber data 18,849 times in a one-year period, from April 2012 to March 2013, according to documents provided to NDP MP Charmaine Borg. And those aren't all the data requests from the federal government - that's just one agency, the CBSA. Of all those requests, CBSA got a warrant in only 52 cases, the documents show, meaning that in 18,797 cases there was no warrant. The telecoms handed over the data for all but 25 requests, and most of the rejections were due to phones not being active or customers leaving the company, the Halifax Chronicle-Herald reports. Other agencies made requests but CBSA had the largest number. Read more - Lire plusParliament resumes debate on Online Spying Bill that provides immunity for telecom companies who are helping authorities spy on Canadians without a warrant
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Libertés civiles et démocratie
Civil liberties and democracy
Obama blesses new authoritarian order in Middle East: Siddiqui
The Toronto Star 26/03/2014 - Fresh from condemning Russia for punishing Ukraine for daring to be democratic, Barack Obama goes to Saudi Arabia Friday to bless the squelching of democracy in the Middle East. There once was an Arab Spring. While it lasted, it helped topple dictators in Egypt, Tunisia, Libya and Yemen. It  unnerved monarchs from Jordan and Morocco to the oil-rich Persian Gulf. But the autocrats have since regrouped and crushed popular revolts to establish a new order. It is a reinforcement of the old order of authoritarianism and wholesale repression. Obama is OK with it. Stephen Harper positively welcomes it. Read more - Lire plusObama to visit Saudi Arabia, key source of funding for growing jihadi militarism in Middle East
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Primauté du droit
Rule of law
Le Devoir 25/03/2014 - Plus de 500 partisans du président islamiste Mohamed Morsi destitué par l'armée ont été condamnés à mort lundi en première instance pour des violences commises durant l'été, à l'issue d'un procès expéditif sur fond de sanglante répression des islamistes en Égypte. Sur les 529 personnes condamnées à la peine capitale dès la seconde audience de ce procès ouvert samedi à al-Minya, à 250  kilomètres au sud du Caire, seuls 153 sont en détention, les autres étant en fuite. Dix-sept des accusés ont été acquittés alors que près de 700 autres personnes, dont des cadres des Frères musulmans de M. Morsi, doivent comparaître mardi pour répondre de violences également survenues le 14 août dans ce même gouvernorat. En l'état, ce verdict, sans précédent dans l'histoire égyptienne, est «une catastrophe, une mascarade et un scandale qui aura des conséquences pour l'Égypte pendant des années», a déploré Gamal Eid, expert juridique à la tête du Réseau arabe pour l'information sur les droits de l'Homme. Lire plusEgypt sentences 529 Mohammed Morsi supporters to death on charges of attacking policeUn procès d'un jour pour 683 autres condamnationsEgypt adjourns second mass Brotherhood trial |
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NSA, É-U et surveillance globale
NSA, US and mass surveillance
Obama veut stopper les écoutes de la NSA
Radio-Canada 25/03/2014 - Le président américain Barack Obama s'apprête à proposer au Congrès des États-Unis de mettre un terme à la collecte massive des écoutes téléphoniques par l'Agence de sécurité nationale (NSA), a-t-on appris lundi auprès d'un responsable de l'administration. Dans ce cadre, le gouvernement fédéral conserverait la capacité d'accéder à des « métadonnées », mais seulement au cas par cas et sur des affaires précises, a ajouté cette source, confirmant une information révélée par le New  York Times. En janvier, Barack Obama a exposé une réforme des pratiques de surveillance de la NSA, dévoilées par Edward Snowden. Il a notamment promis que les services secrets américains ne pourraient plus espionner les dirigeants de pays amis ou alliés et a également proposé de modifier les règles de collecte des données téléphoniques des Américains. Dans l'intervalle, et jusqu'à la promulgation d'une nouvelle loi, l'administration Obama va renouveler l'autorisation du programme de la NSA de collecte et de stockage de ces « métadonnées », a ajouté ce responsable. Lire plus Obama's New NSA Proposal and Democratic Partisan HackeryJameel Jaffer: Some questions about the President's phone-records proposalJameel Jaffer: Obama is cancelling the NSA dragnet. So why did all three branches sign off?Neil Macdonald: Obama's 'Snowden reform' of NSA spying won't help Edward SnowdenSnowden speaks on Obama reforms as supporters call for end of his persecutionThe Intercept 20/03/2014 - Across the world, people who work as system administrators keep computer networks in order - and this has turned them into unwitting targets of the National Security Agency for simply doing their jobs. According to a secret document provided by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, the agency tracks down the private email and Facebook accounts of system administrators (or sys admins, as they are often called), before hacking their computers to gain access to the networks they control. The  document consists of several posts - one of them is titled "I hunt sys admins" - that were published in 2012 on an internal discussion board hosted on the agency's classified servers. They were written by an NSA official involved in the agency's effort to break into foreign network routers, the devices that connect computer networks and transport data across the Internet. By infiltrating the computers of system administrators who work for foreign phone and Internet companies, the NSA can gain access to the calls and emails that flow over their networks. The classified posts reveal how the NSA official aspired to create a database that would function as an international hit list of sys admins to potentially target. Yet the document makes clear that the admins are not suspected of any criminal activity - they are targeted only because they control access to networks the agency wants to infiltrate. "Who better to target than the person that already has the 'keys to the kingdom'?" one of the posts says. Read more - Lire plusLa NSA aurait infiltré les serveurs du géant chinois HuaweiAffaire Snowden : des informations aux mains des Russes?De peur d'être espionné, Jimmy Carter préfère les lettres aux courrielsEncrypt all the things: Data security action planVos courriels Gmail plus difficiles à espionnerRevelations of N.S.A. spying cost U.S. tech companiesSome facts about how NSA stories are reported
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Autres nouvelles - More news
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Afghanistan
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Freedom of expression
Liberté d'expression
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Guantanamo
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Guerre au terrorisme
War on terror
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Immigration and refugee rights
Immigration et droits des réfugié.es
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No fly list
Liste d'interdiction de vol
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Omar Khadr
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Pakistan
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Press freedom
Liberté de la presse
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Primauté du droit
Rule of law
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Renvoi vers la torture
Rendition to torture
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Secret d'État
State secret
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Suppression de la dissidence
Suppression of dissent
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Surveillance et vie privée
Surveillance and privacy
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Terrorism cases
Procès pour terrorisme
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Les opinions exprimées ne reflètent pas nécessairement les positions de la CSILC - The views expressed do not necessarily reflect the positions of ICLMG
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Évènement
Protest against 529 sentenced to death in Egypt
Sunday, March 30th at noon on Parliament Hill
Manifestation contre la condamnation à mort de 529 Égyptiens après deux jours de procès de masse violant le droit international.
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Évènement
Defensora - Film & discussion
Monday, April 7th at 8 pm @ ByTowne Cinema
In this new documentary by Canadian filmmaker Rachel Schmidt, meet the members of a Guatemalan Mayan community who take the unprecedented step of seeking justice in the Canadian court system for alleged abuses committed by a Canadian mining company: abuses that include murder, rape, and forced evictions.
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Évènement
The Secret Trial 5 - Le film
The Secret Trial 5 brilliantly captures the tragic stories of Muslim men detained under the Canadian government's security certificates, an "immigration process" that allows for the indefinite jailing of non-citizens without charge-unless they agree to be deported to countries where they face serious risk of torture. Screenings at the Hot Docs Film Festival in Toronto on April 26, 28 and 30, 2014.
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Action
Signez la déclaration Protéger notre vie privée maintenant
Le gouvernement est sur le point d'adopter le projet de loi C-13 qui assure une immunité aux entreprises de télécommunications lorsque celles-ci donnent nos informations privées aux autorités, même quand ces dernières n'ont pas de mandat.
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Action
Canadian campaign against mass surveillance: Call on your MP to stand against costly online spying
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What is the News Digest? Qu'est-ce que la Revue de l'actualité?
The News Digest is ICLMG's weekly publication of news articles, events, calls to action and much more regarding national security, anti-terrorism, and civil liberties. The ICLMG is a national coalition of thirty-eight Canadian civil society organizations that was established in the aftermath of the September, 2001 terrorist attacks in the United States.
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La revue de l'actualité est notre publication hebdomadaire de nouvelles, d'évènements, d'appels à l'action, et beaucoup plus, entourant la sécurité nationale, la lutte au terrorisme, et les libertés civiles. La CSILC est une coalition nationale de 38 organisations de la société civile canadienne qui a été créée suite aux attentats terroristes de septembre 2001 aux États-Unis.
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