WAR MEASURES ACT
The 'War Measures Act' (enacted in August 1914, replaced by the Emergencies Act in 1988) was a Canadian statute that allowed the government to assume sweeping emergency powers.
The act was invoked three times in Canadian history:
Thousands of Germans and other aliens were interned in 25 internment camps across Canada as a result of the War Measures Act, issuing into Canada's first national internment operations of 1914-1920. These enemy aliens not only suffered imprisonment but many thousands more were forced to carry identity documents and report regularly to the authorities. Those who were jailed were also subjected to various state-sanctioned censures, including restrictions on their freedom of movement, association and free speech and, in 1917, to disenfranchisement. The internment operations continued until June 1920, nearly 2 years after the end of the war. Since the mid-1980s the Ukrainian Canadian Civel Liberties Association has called for an official recognition of the internment operations and a restitution of the contemporary value of the internees' confiscated wealth, those monies to be dedicated to various commemorative and educational projects.
During the war there was widespread fear of foreign nationals spying and working against the country of Canada. As a result the federal government used the act to implement Japanese Canadian internment. Any citizen of Japanese descent including children were sent to internment camps for the duration of the war.
==The October Crisis==

In 1970, Quebec nationalists and FLQ members kidnapped British diplomat James Cross and Quebec provincial cabinet minister Pierre Laporte, who was later murdered. What is now referred to as the October Crisis raised fears in Canada of a militant terrorist faction rising up against the government. At the request of the Mayor of Montreal, Jean Drapeau, and the government of the Province of Quebec, and in response to general threats and demands made by the FLQ, the federal Liberal government of Pierre Trudeau invoked the act. He did this so police had more power in arrest and detention, so they could find and stop the FLQ members. There was a large amount of concern about the act being invoked as it was a direct threat to civil liberties.
★ War Measures Act in the Canadian Encyclopedia
★ Text of War Measures Act
The act was invoked three times in Canadian history:
| Contents |
| First World War |
| Second World War |
| External links |
First World War
Thousands of Germans and other aliens were interned in 25 internment camps across Canada as a result of the War Measures Act, issuing into Canada's first national internment operations of 1914-1920. These enemy aliens not only suffered imprisonment but many thousands more were forced to carry identity documents and report regularly to the authorities. Those who were jailed were also subjected to various state-sanctioned censures, including restrictions on their freedom of movement, association and free speech and, in 1917, to disenfranchisement. The internment operations continued until June 1920, nearly 2 years after the end of the war. Since the mid-1980s the Ukrainian Canadian Civel Liberties Association has called for an official recognition of the internment operations and a restitution of the contemporary value of the internees' confiscated wealth, those monies to be dedicated to various commemorative and educational projects.
Second World War
During the war there was widespread fear of foreign nationals spying and working against the country of Canada. As a result the federal government used the act to implement Japanese Canadian internment. Any citizen of Japanese descent including children were sent to internment camps for the duration of the war.
==The October Crisis==

Military cordon in support of police taking surrender of terrorist Liberation cell, December 3, 1970
In 1970, Quebec nationalists and FLQ members kidnapped British diplomat James Cross and Quebec provincial cabinet minister Pierre Laporte, who was later murdered. What is now referred to as the October Crisis raised fears in Canada of a militant terrorist faction rising up against the government. At the request of the Mayor of Montreal, Jean Drapeau, and the government of the Province of Quebec, and in response to general threats and demands made by the FLQ, the federal Liberal government of Pierre Trudeau invoked the act. He did this so police had more power in arrest and detention, so they could find and stop the FLQ members. There was a large amount of concern about the act being invoked as it was a direct threat to civil liberties.
External links
★ War Measures Act in the Canadian Encyclopedia
★ Text of War Measures Act
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