National Security Expert Huda Mukbil. (Photo credit: @HudaMukbil/ Twitter)

Topics: Justice | Human Rights

Ex-employee alleges discrimination over Muslim faith at Canada’s top spy agency

Huda Mukbil told CBC News she was treated as a potential threat by her own colleagues at CSIS

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(RNS) — A former intelligence officer has accused Canada’s top spy agency of discrimination. Huda Mukbil says she was discriminated against while a member of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service because of her Muslim faith and said the treatment posed a national security threat to Canada.

“It’s the reason why individuals in the Muslim community don’t feel they can trust the organization to tackle far-right threats,” said Mukbil in a recent interview with CBC, Canada’s national broadcast service.

Mukbil’s accusations come as she runs for a seat in the Canadian Parliament. She is the New Democratic Party candidate for Ottawa South. The NDP is the fourth largest party in the Parliament and is led by Jagmeet Singh, the first Sikh and person of South Asian heritage to lead a major political party in North America.


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Mukbil said that during her years serving in the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, she was treated as a potential threat by colleagues. In 2005, three years after joining the force, she was interrogated by CSIS officials about why she wore hijab, about her frequency of prayer and about her views on the war in Afghanistan and other foreign policy topics. She complained about the incident to her supervisors but claims she got little response.

Mukbil filed a discrimination lawsuit against the CSIS in 2017, which was joined by other intelligence officers who said they experienced other forms of discrimination. That lawsuit was settled out of court. In April, the CSIS asked that a similar lawsuit by a different Muslim employee be thrown out of court.

But in an interview last year, the agency’s director admitted that systematic racism was an issue at CSIS. Some Muslims who work for intelligence services in the United States have also complained of microaggressions and other harassment from their colleagues.

Mukbil’s allegations came just weeks after four members of a Muslim family in London, Ontario, were killed in an apparent bias attack in early June. In 2017, a right-wing terrorist opened fire at a mosque in Quebec City, Quebec. That attack killed six people, and law enforcement investigators determined the man had self-radicalized online after coming into contact with far-right groups.

Both the United States and Canada are part of the Five Eyes, an overlapping series of intelligence alliances linking Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States together on intelligence efforts. In the United States, the Biden administration is looking to put more emphasis on countering violent extremism from far-right groups, which are increasingly operating across international borders.

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  • says:

    CSIS has a duty to vet her as any Canadian intelligence organization vets its officers. She is both required to take polygraph tests and I would assume make positive disclosure. That is where she is able to self disclose anything in her past that might make her subject to blackmail from our enemies. If she chose not to do this the Agency has a duty to determine why here. More going on here than reported in this article