Investigative journalist Sam Cooper’s revelations of money laundering and communist China’s involvement in transnational criminal activities on Canadian soil was the topic of a panel discussion on Oct. 21, with one expert saying that Ottawa should do a better job of keeping the public informed.
The book reveals how these criminal activities fuelled the opioid crisis in Canada while driving real estate prices so high as to become unaffordable for many, and how the hands of law enforcement officials were oftentimes tied due to pressure from politicians.
Cooper said that through access to confidential records, he learned that many suspects of transnational crimes attended the CCP’s United Front Work Department meetings in Vancouver, where they rubbed shoulders with elite Canadian politicians.
“We could see so-called cash-for-access political donation activity there, we could see politicians that would seem to start to pick up the line of the Chinese state,” he said.
“And this wasn’t just my recognition—if we had been listening to Chinese Canadians and Hong Kong Canadians that have been sources for CSIS [Canadian Security Intelligence Service] for two decades, they’d be telling the very same story that I revealed,” he said.
As for why the Canadian government seems to be ignoring this growing threat, Chrustie said that in federal institutions “there’s been a historical concern in terms of risk aversion in terms of educating the public in terms of what type of information we were in possession of, and sharing that in educating the public.”
“There’s been a focus, ‘hey, just investigate, just collect intelligence,’” he said. “But as you do all those things if you’re not educating the public in terms of what’s going on it’s going to be a problem.”
On that front, he said, countries such as the United States, Australia, UK, and Israel where “intelligence is part of society” do better than Canada.
“In Canada, people can say there’s laws preventing it, and I’m sure there’s impediments there, but we haven’t done a good job until I think in the last year or so actually having these public discussions about it.”
Chrustie said there are certain individuals as well as the media who downgrade the seriousness of the problems, something that was also evident during the Cullen Commission’s inquiry into money laundering in B.C., at which he testified.
‘Parallels Around the World’
Corr described Cooper’s book as “a tour de force of the links between the CCP and Chinese Communist Party gangs in Canada.”“What we see is a general pattern of Chinese Communist Party influence and utilization of whatever kind of bad actors, rogue actors, in the world that you see today, whether that’s Russia, which is arguably a bad actor, a rogue state, North Korea, Iran.”
“This is kind of the background, the global backdrop,“ he explained. ”I think what makes Sam’s book so important is that he goes into very deep detail in a way that we don’t have other places but we really should.”
He said the CCP also supports the Taliban in Afghanistan, and with the terrorist organization now in power, Beijing has access to trillions of dollars’ worth of natural resources.