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Canadian authorities are collecting information about the far-right Proud Boys group as part of a possible terrorist designation, the federal Liberal government said Sunday as it faced calls to ban the organization over its role in last week’s U.S. Capitol attack.
Public Safety Minister Bill Blair’s office stopped short of saying when — or even if — the Proud Boys would actually be added to Canada’s national list of terrorist organizations, which includes such groups as al-Qaeda, Hezbollah and ISIS.
Blair spokesperson Mary-Liz Power instead specifically named it as one of the “ideologically motivated” extremist groups that are being closely watched as Ottawa looks to counter the threat posed by white supremacists and other far-right organizations.
“Our national security and law enforcement agencies are very actively engaged in monitoring the activities of these groups and gathering the evidence required to support a determination of listing as a terrorist organization,” Power said in an email.
Founded by Canadian Gavin McInnes, the Proud Boys are a far-right group that is unapologetically misogynist and increasingly linked to white supremacy and hate. It was later banned by Facebook and Instagram in October 2018 for violating their hate policies.
The group first made headlines in Canada when several self-identified members in the Royal Canadian Navy disrupted an Indigenous protest in Halifax in 2017, and it has since grown its international profile and membership.
U.S. President Donald Trump famously declined to condemn the Proud Boys during a U.S. presidential debate with Joe Biden in September, instead telling the group to “stand back and stand by.” He later joined Biden in denouncing the group.
WATCH | Trump seems to encourage Proud Boys when asked to condemn white supremacy:
Several members were nonetheless among those who stormed Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., following a speech by Trump on Jan. 6, according to numerous media reports. In response, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh has led calls for the federal government to ban the group in Canada.
Power did not say when authorities first started monitoring the Proud Boys as a potential terrorist threat.
“Terrorist designations are not political exercises,” she said. “They involve a legal process requiring evidence and intelligence.”
‘I think it’s about time,’ terrorism expert says
Created in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks on the U.S. in September 2001, the terror list includes more than 50 organizations. Groups on the list may have their assets seized, and there are serious criminal penalties for helping them carry out extremist activities.
Many of the listed organizations are Islamic terrorist groups such as al-Qaeda, Boko Haram, Hezbollah and ISIS, but two far-right groups — Blood & Honour, an international neo-Nazi network, and its armed wing, Combat 18 — were added in June 2019.
Amarnath Amarasingam, a terrorism expert at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ont., described the U.S. Capitol siege as the type of “watershed event” that often sparks debate around whether to classify a specific organization as a terrorist group.
While the government and law-enforcement agencies will need to rationalize adding the group to the list, Amarasingam suggested that wouldn’t be hard, even as he dismissed suggestions such a decision is not political.
“We basically would not be talking about the Proud Boys if there wasn’t a sea change happening right now with how governments, social media companies and communities are dealing with far-right groups. It’s not only political, but it’s very much political,” he said.
“Governments want to send a message that this sort of thing is not going to be tolerated, and that applies to far-right groups as well. I think it’s about time.”
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