Dear comrades and friends,

The Central Executive Committee of the Communist Party of Canada has 
released the following statement in response to recently-released documents 
which show that the Canadian government and its RCMP security police had 
planned to arrest and intern Communists in the event of a third world war. 
The Canadian Press news report which brought these sinister plans to light 
is also appended below.

Central Office,
Communist Party of Canada

****************
Statement of the Central Executive Committee,
Communist Party of Canada
January 28, 2000

The Communist Party of Canada has condemned the existence of secret plans 
of the Canadian government to have the RCMP imprison Communists and their 
children in designated "internment camps" in the event of a third world 
war. This plan, which had been drawn up in the late 1940s, was only 
"officially abandoned" in 1983.

Although this 'internment plan' specifically targeted Communists and their 
families, it represented a flagrant disregard for the civil and human 
rights of Canadians as a whole. That is why the these revelations should 
concern all democratic-minded Canadians.

This chilling plan, the details of which are only now coming to light, was 
entirely consistent with the prevailing anti-communist policies of the 
Canadian State, which for decades has sought to isolate and weaken the CPC.

Ever since its formation in 1921, the Communist Party has faced continued 
harassment from police and security forces. Tim Buck, our Party's long-time 
general secretary, and seven other Party leaders were arrested and 
imprisoned during the 1930s under the notorious Section 98 of the Criminal 
Code which outlawed so-called "subversive organizations." An attempt was 
later made to assassinate Tim Buck while in prison.

  Many Communists were also interned during the Second World War; party 
offices and meeting halls were closed; its printing presses and other 
assets seized; and its press and publications banned. Following WWII, the 
Party and its activists suffered state-organized persecution for several 
decades during the "Cold War" period.

These state-sponsored attacks on our Party were part of a broader assault 
on the trade union movement, as well as on activists in the peace, native 
and other progressive movements and organizations. The wrongful and illegal 
activities of the RCMP were documented and exposed by the MacDonald Royal 
Commission back in the early 1980s. 'Dirty tricks' included unlawful spying 
and wiretapping, theft of documents, destruction of property, the use of 
'agent-provocateurs,' etc. In the late 1970's, bugging devises were 
uncovered throughout the CPC headquarters in Toronto. When this sinister 
and illegal spying on the CPC -- a registered political party in Canada -- 
was exposed, the RCMP arrogantly responded by demanding that their 
"property" be returned!

The findings of the MacDonald Commission forced the government to transfer 
security and intelligence operations from the RCMP to the newly-formed 
Canadian Security and Intelligence Service (CSIS). However, CSIS has 
continued to employ surveillance practices and other assorted  'dirty 
tricks' against the CPC and other lawful organizations and individuals ever 
since.

This specific plan to intern Communist leaders in the event of a third 
world war reflects the long-standing but patently false presumption that 
Canadian Communists were somehow 'agents of a foreign power' - namely, the 
Soviet Union - and therefore constituted a 'threat to national security.'

Canadians have every reason to be angered and dismayed that successive 
Canadian governments had contemplated such draconian and illegal measures 
up until as recently as 1983, especially in light of the "official" 
repudiation of the racist internment of Japanese Canadians during WWII.

Particularly horrendous was the intention to round up and intern the 
children of Party activists. This shows that the deep-seated paranoia and 
hatred of Communists by the Canadian government knew no bounds.

The Communist Party calls upon the Canadian Government to make public all 
documents relating to this sordid affair, including the actual lists of 
individuals whose civil and human rights were to be violated in the name of 
"national security." Furthermore, the CPC demands that the Canadian 
government publicly renounce the decision of prior governments to consider 
such anti-democratic action, and officially apologize to the CPC and to the 
families of all those individual Communists who were targeted under this plan.

The civil and human rights of all Canadians are enshrined in the Charter of 
Rights and Freedoms. Canadians must demand that these fundamental rights 
must be strictly respected and obeyed, especially by governments and their 
police and security services.

****************

RCMP's secret internment plan

By Dean Beeby -- Canadian Press
January 24, 2000

The Mounties planned to round up more than 1,000 "subversives" -- including 
young children -- at the outbreak of a third world war and place them in 
internment camps, newly disclosed documents show.

The Cold War-era plan, abandoned only in 1983, targeted leading Communists 
who were to be locked inside three federal prisons in Ontario and Alberta.

"The present number of persons who would be arrested as subversives in the 
event of a national emergency are 588 males and 174 females," says a 1970 
memo from the RCMP.

"The type of person involved is not likely to be violent, dangerous or 
inclined toward escaping."

The documents, obtained under the Access to Information Act, show that the 
war internment plan was first drawn up in the late 1940s but was revived 
and expanded from 1969 to 1971.

The RCMP had 762 people on their to-be-interned list in 1970, including 13 
children under the age of 11 and 23 between the ages of 12 and 16.

Most were from the Toronto area, though no names are included in the 
released material.

The group was primarily made up of people deemed "prominent Communist 
functionaries" by an RCMP Security Service program known as Profunc.

Those under 17 were likely the children of the target internees, and were 
referred to disparagingly by the Mounties as "red diaper babies".

The plan was to round up these so-called subversives quickly and place them 
in temporary custody while three federal prisons were emptied of their 
inmates.

A prison in Drumheller, Alta., was to be used for the west, and another in 
Warkworth, Ont., for the rest of the country. Women, however, were to be 
placed in the Joyceville, Ont., penitentiary, near Kingston.

"Mothers with babies at breast will be accommodated in the Joyceville 
Institution hospital area and . . . their children must in the first 
instance be placed with relatives or with Children's Aid Societies," says 
one 1969 document.

The existing prison population across the country would be thinned out by 
freeing non-violent inmates with less than a year left in their sentences. 
By shuffling the remaining prisoners, the three Alberta and Ontario prisons 
could be vacated within 10 days to become internment camps.

The Mounties had approval to lock up 762 people in 1970 but argued they 
would likely add more after cabinet invoked its extraordinary powers under 
the War Measures Act.

"There are approximately another 300, although not approved at present, 
they would no doubt be approved in time of war."

Rules for the camps were detailed in an RCMP manual that outlined 
procedures for everything from mail censorship to punishment.

"Punishment Diet Number One shall consist of water as required and one 
pound of bread per day," says an edition of the manual from the 1960s.

"Punishment Diet Number Two shall consist of water as required and, for 
each day, eight ounces of bread for breakfast . . . four ounces of oatmeal, 
eight ounces of potatoes and salt, for dinner and eight ounces of bread for 
supper."

The internment plan was abandoned at the order of the justice minister in 
1983, the documents show. The reasons are not specified, though it may have 
been linked to the creation in 1984 of the Canadian Security Intelligence 
Service which took over many RCMP Security Service functions.

The revival of the Communist internment plan in the late 1960s may have 
been the Mounties' response to student protests, black power and Quebec 
separatist agitation, says a historian.

"There's this mindset going into the 1960s where Communism is a top 
threat," said Steve Hewitt, a professor at the University of Saskatchewan 
who is writing a book on the RCMP and subversion.

"And the RCMP Security Service is like an elephant charging in one 
direction. . . . It's very difficult for it to change its mindset, to get 
away from this red-and-white world and realize there are these other threats."

A retired Security Service officer said Canada faced a genuine threat from 
Communist subversives, but not so serious as to require an elaborate 
internment plan.

"It was a serious case of the RCMP Security Service carrying a huge 
tar-and-feather brush much too far," Peter Marwitz said from Ottawa.

In one of the darkest moments in Canadian history, Ottawa interned 
thousands of Japanese Canadians during the Second World War for fear they 
might help Japan. The internees received an apology and compensation in 1988.





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Communist Party of Canada
290A Danforth Ave.,
Toronto, Ont. M4K 1N6
416-469-2446 (voice)
416-469-4063 (fax)
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.communist-party.ca

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