Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the RCMP “will not hesitate to take action” against the unofficial Chinese police service stations suspected to be operating in various locations across the country that are under investigation.
Conservative MP and public safety critic Pierre Paul-Hus asked the prime minister during question period in the House of Commons, on May 9, if the Liberal government plans on shutting down the covert stations in the near future. Trudeau replied that the RCMP “is following up” on it.
“Our police operate independently,” Trudeau said. “We expect the police to do their job, to ensure Canadian safety, and they will continue to do that.”
“Foreign actors attempting to monitor, intimidate, or threaten Canadians is completely unacceptable,” Trudeau later added. “The RCMP have said that they are actively investigating these suspected stations and, as they have done before, they will not hesitate to take action again.”
Police Stations
Other suspected unofficial police stations remain under investigation, as the RCMP said it was looking into two “presumed Chinese police stations” in Montreal, having received over a dozen “serious tips” about them.Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino told a House of Commons committee that the stations were shut down.
“The RCMP have taken decisive action to shut down the so-called police stations,” he told the Commons Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs on April 27.
The House passed a non-binding motion on May 8 calling on the Liberal government to immediately take steps to shut down the unofficial police stations still in operation.