Feels like mid-30s in parts of Canada, while other areas expecting snow
Anything is possible this week, as far as Canada's weather is concerned, with forecasts ranging from scorching heat in some parts of the country to rain and snow in others.
As the foreign interference commission kicked off this week, the inquiry received fierce criticism from a diaspora group often targeted by China.
In a statement Wednesday, the Uyghur Rights Advocacy Project (URAP) said its members will not participate in the inquiry, blaming commissioner Marie-Josée Hogue for allowing "a significant security risk" to their community and families back in China.
Some national security experts fear this will undermine the integrity of the inquiry into alleged Chinese interference in the 2019 and 2021 elections.
URAP executive director Mehmet Tohti says Uyghur Canadians pulled out to protest Hogue's decision to grant former Liberal MP Han Dong and current Markham Deputy Mayor Michael Chan full standing in the commission.
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"We don't want to be questioned by those [who] are allegedly tied up with the Chinese Communist Party," Tohti said.
Both Han and Chan deny the allegations against them, but with full standing, they have access to classified documents submitted to the commission and have the ability to cross-examine witnesses.
"There is something terribly wrong here," Tohti said.
The Uyghurs are a Muslim minority group in the northwestern Chinese region of Xinjiang.
Human rights groups accuse Beijing of forcing more than one million of these ethnically Turkic people into forced labour camps.
An August 2022 report from the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights concluded China is responsible for "serious human rights violations" against the Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities.
Phil Gurski, a former strategic analyst at the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), says the commission is missing a key perspective without Uyghur testimony.
"It takes away from the credibility of the inquiry," he said. "Canadians are not going to get a full picture of what China is doing in our country."
Gurski argues with much of the evidence expected to remain classified, testimony from various diaspora groups would help Canadians get a more complete view of the problem.
"If you're going to have a public inquiry, you have to make sure that the information that can be released into the public sphere is released," he said.
Former CSIS director Ward Elcock says while it's important to shed light on communities facing intimidation and threats from Beijing, the Uyghur's absence will have little effect on the commission's overall goal.
"I frankly don't think it has much impact," he said. "The commission of inquiry is not really about foreign interference broadly writ. It's about foreign interference in two elections."
Elcock adds Hogue was left little choice but to grant Dong and Chan full standing.
"Nobody has demonstrated publicly, or demonstrated in a court, that these people are what some people allege them to be," he said.
Anything is possible this week, as far as Canada's weather is concerned, with forecasts ranging from scorching heat in some parts of the country to rain and snow in others.
Canada's annual inflation rate slowed to a three-year low of 2.7 per cent in April, matching expectations, and core measures continued to ease, data showed on Tuesday, likely boosting chances of a June interest rate cut.
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