Bomb threats were received ahead of Shen Yun’s performances scheduled to take place from April 8 to 12, according to the Falun Dafa Association of Vancouver, the local presenter of the show. Vancouver Civic Theatres, the organization that manages the Queen Elizabeth Theatre where Shen Yun performs annually, received an emailed threat on April 2.
The presenter says the bomb threat, translated from Chinese by the Vancouver Police Department (VPD), claimed that a “large quantity” of explosives had been placed in the theatre and would be detonated if all upcoming Shen Yun performances were not cancelled.
The Vancouver theatre reported the threat to Vancouver police on April 3, prompting an investigation. The VPD told The Epoch Times that police determined the threat was “unfounded” and noted that as a precaution, a bomb-sniffing dog checked the premises and found no traces of a bomb.
“The Shen Yun Performing Arts shows continued as scheduled,” a spokesperson for the VPD said.
In addition to bomb-sniffing dogs, additional security personnel and metal detectors were also implemented to allow the theatre to maintain the shows and ensure audience members felt safe, the organizers said.
Although police confirmed the threats were unfounded, the theatre still decided to cancel the shows, which Shen Yun’s local presenter, the Falun Dafa Association of Toronto, said is unprecedented globally. The organization requested that the venue reverse its decision, saying artistic freedom shouldn’t be suppressed due to the threats, but the venue maintained its decision. The Epoch Times contacted the Four Seasons Centre and its owner and operator, the Canadian Opera Company, but didn’t hear back.
The show organizers say there have been over 150 such threats issued against Shen Yun over the past two years, which they say the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is behind, in an effort to cancel Shen Yun.
Tracing the Email
The VPD Cybercrime Unit investigated the email address used to send the bomb threat to Vancouver Civic Theatres and determined the threat was sent from a VPN address linked to Asian regions, the organizers said, noting that while this is not conclusive evidence of the user being in Asia, the default servers for VPN services are typically in the same region as the user.In addition, police found a phone number associated with the email address and determined it was a Chinese phone number, with the user based in China.
The show’s organizers said the Vancouver hoax threat fits the same pattern as the recent threats in Toronto and Seattle. The Marion Oliver McCaw Hall in Seattle, where Shen Yun performed from April 1 to 5, received a bomb threat on April 3, which was cleared after police conducted a sweep of the theatre and the shows proceeded.
The Vancouver theatre also received a second threat email on April 6, but organizers have yet to receive information from the VPD on further details.

Emails Boast of Success, Mock Canada
Meanwhile, the sender of the emailed bomb threats to the Four Seasons Centre on March 29 also sent follow-up emails on April 3, boasting about having links to the CCP and declaring victory for the cancellation of the Toronto performances.“The Toronto Four Seasons incident was my most successful one ... Haha!” reads an email, written in Chinese, which was sent to the local presenter on April 3.
The email also cited the CCP as the sender’s “motherland” and denounced Canadian politicians as “insignificant.”
“I think that Canada’s petty politicians are utterly insignificant. ... Canada is hardly worth taking seriously. ... Even my motherland’s Communist Party couldn’t make the Shen Yun emcee cry, yet I actually did it,” the email reads.
A subsequent email sent a few minutes later by the same sender again boasted about the disruptions: “Hahaha! What can you do to me!? Hahaha! Police around the world have become like dogs ... running around everywhere at my command! Hahaha!”
The Toronto show’s presenter provided evidence indicating the same email account has been used to send threats to multiple venues around the world, including theatres in Birmingham, England; Rouen, France; Busan, South Korea, and others.
Threats Targeting Leaders
The Toronto presenter said last month that China-linked threats against Shen Yun and organizers of the show in Canada had expanded to include Canadian politicians, including Prime Minister Mark Carney, former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, MPs, and other senior Canadian officials.The threats similarly warned that officials could face harm, including from explosive devices, if scheduled Shen Yun performances across Canada went ahead as planned.

MP Reactions
Several Canadian MPs condemned the cancellation of Shen Yun performances in Toronto over the fake bomb threat.Conservative MP Garnett Genuis said it is “really outrageous” that the fake threats were able to shut down Shen Yun’s performances in Toronto.
Genuis said dealing with these kinds of threats can be “really challenging” for community-based organizations, and lawmakers need to support local resistance to foreign interference threats, as well as stronger enforcement at the national level.
“We know that Shen Yun has faced challenges, not because it’s controversial among Canadians, but because a foreign government doesn’t like it,” he said. He added that the cancellation of the shows in Toronto “should be a wake-up call about the need to defend artistic expression in this country.”

She noted that the incidents are not “isolated disruptions” but are part of “a deliberate effort to intimidate, to silence, and to interfere with lawful cultural expression in Canada.” She also said the threats targeting Parliament Hill and Canadian politicians are “an unacceptable affront to our democratic system.”
Canadians should take the threats with “utmost seriousness,” Sgro said, urging law enforcement agencies to thoroughly investigate the issue and take measures to “protect Canadians and uphold our sovereignty.”
“Let me be clear: foreign interference, intimidation, and harassment have no place in this country,” she said.







