UCCLA - NO KGB IN CANADA! Campaign Launched

Ottawa - The Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association is ramping up its campaign to get all NKVD, KGB and other Communist secret police veterans out of Canada.

UCCLA’s “No KGB in Canada!” involves thousands of its supporters mailing in pre-printed postcards to Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, the Honourable Jason Kenney (Minister of Citizenship, Immigration and Multiculturalism) and the Honourable Peter Van Loan (Minister of Public Safety). The cards share a common message: “Veterans of Soviet secret police formations like the NKVD, SMERSH and KGB should not be allowed to enter Canada nor to remain here. No exceptions. Denaturalize and deport them all, immediately.”

UCCLA’s chairman, Dr. Lubomyr Luciuk, explained: “For years we have alerted the Government of Canada, the RCMP and others to the illegal presence in our country of veterans of the Soviet secret police. We don’t know how many there are but some openly boasted about their participation in torture and mass murder.

“While we have always championed the principle that any person found in Canada alleged to be a war criminal should be tried in a criminal court, politics is the art of the possible. Since the federal government insists upon using denaturalization and deportation for dealing with persons who should not be in Canada, we call upon Ottawa to apply its preferred standard in every case, without exceptions. There should be no KGB men in Canada, not now, not ever. Indeed, Canada should not be a haven for anyone who admits that they were involved in war crimes, regardless of their ethnic, racial or religious heritage, their ideological convictions, or the period or place where they committed or enabled such crimes against humanity. Justice cannot be selective,” concluded Luciuk.