After the death of Aaron Driver, Canadians are debating whether peace bonds and changes to the Anti-Terrorism Act known as Bill C-51 are the right tools to prevent home-grown extremism.
Driver died in a confrontation with police Wednesday in Strathroy, Ont., after a tip from the FBI.
Driver had been placed on a peace bond in February at the request of the RCMP, but the restrictions on his civil liberties were not enough to stop him from making bombs and planning a terror attack.
The peace bond restricted Driverâs freedoms after a judge agreed there were reasonable grounds to fear that Driver would "participate in or contribute to, directly or indirectly, the activity of a terrorist group to facilitate or carry out a terrorist activity."
Driver had repeatedly supported ISIS on social media, was in contact with members of ISIS overseas, and had a recipe for homemade bombs on his computer when police raided his Winnipeg home in June 2015. He moved to Strathroy a few months later.
Under the terms of his peace bond, Driver was prohibited from using a computer or cellphone and was required to wear a GPS monitoring bracelet -- conditions that would have ended in late August.
Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said Thursday that although peace bonds can be beneficial, there is âno perfect tool.â
âThe peace bonds typically say, âYou can't do this and you can't do that and you canât do this other thing,ââ Goodale told reporters in Regina.
âThat raises the question then, with those negative influences taken away, what is the positive influence that you try and inject in that personâs circumstances and living conditions that would have a moderating influence?â
âWhat the peace bonds do not provide, at this stage, is an interconnection with some kind of intervenor who can make a difference in that personâs behaviour,â Goodale went on.
Goodale said the governmentâs promised Office of the Community Outreach and Counter-radicalization Co-ordinator will help overcome this shortcoming.
Nawaz Tahir, a spokesperson for the London Muslim Mosque that Driver had attended in recent months, told ŰÎŰ´ŤĂ˝ Channel Thursday that the community had tried âto engage him.â
He said the community tried to âkeep him in touch with people who could ⌠teach him about the true meaning of Islam, the peaceful way of Islam.â
that he reached out to a mosque in Winnipeg last year requesting help, but a counsellor there was also unable to de-radicalize his son.
Goodale was asked whether recent incidents like Driverâs plot will change the Liberalsâ position that they will repeal and replace the Conservative 2015 changes to the Anti-Terrorism Act, known as Bill C-51.
He said the Liberals remain committed to make changes that allow âpolice and security agencies (to be) effective in keeping Canadians safeâ and safeguard âCanadian values, our rights and freedoms and the open democratic nature of our country.â
Bill C-51 has come under fire from civil liberty groups for making it easier for police to get peace bonds and for lengthening the amount of time someone can be held without being charge.
The International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group states that âC-51 substantially broadens the stateâs ability to control an individualâs liberty without any criminal charge or conviction, and with minimal evidence of any criminal plan or intention by lowering the threshold for a preventive arrest from âwill commitâ a crime to âmay commitâ a crime.â
Lorne Dawson, a University of Waterloo terrorism export who interviewed Driver when RCMP sought a peace bond, told ŰÎŰ´ŤĂ˝ Channel he suspects the peace bond may have made things worse.
âI suspect the peace bond caused him to feel cut off from support ⌠so ironically in isolation he might have been drawn back to jihad to give purpose to his life,â he said Thursday.
Conservative MP Erin OâToole said that although C-51 was portrayed as âominousâ before last yearâs election, he believes it offers âbalance between allowing the free society we all enjoy and security provisionsâ and says there is âcourt monitoring of all of them.â
âWhat concerns me is the Liberal government that voted for C-51 but then promises to amend it,â he said. âThe minister yesterday said heâs going to amend it but he hasnât mentioned what,â OâToole went on.
âLaw enforcement are using these tools in some cases averting attacks at the 11th hour,â OâToole added. âSo theyâve got to start being honest with Canadians about public safety.â
With a report from ŰÎŰ´ŤĂ˝ Parliament Hill Correspondent Glen McGregor