[ISN] Ottawa to set up secure communication system safe from hackers

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Fri Mar 26 2004 - 00:26:45 PST

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    http://money.canoe.ca/News/Other/2004/03/25/395748-cp.html
    
    By JIM BRONSKILL
    2004-03-25
    
    OTTAWA (CP) - A government-wide secret communication system is in the
    works to ensure federal officials can talk to each other without
    hackers or terrorists snooping on them.
    
    Public Safety Minister Anne McLellan said the project is part of a
    larger effort to help organizations with security responsibilities
    communicate more easily. "Communications are absolutely key.  
    Intelligence gathering is key," McLellan said after a speech to
    security and police officials Thursday.
    
    "If you're going to prevent various kinds of terrorist attacks, the
    better your intelligence, the better prepared you are. And you also
    need to be secure around making sure that those communications are
    shared."
    
    McLellan suggested existing systems in government departments are
    quite secure, but form a piecemeal network of different technologies
    that sometimes make communication a challenge.
    
    The emphasis on better flow of intelligence was likely a pre-emptive
    move as Auditor General Sheila Fraser prepares to release a report
    Tuesday scrutinizing the technical barriers that hamper the exchange
    of messages between Canada's security information systems.
    
    Fraser's report will examine overall federal handling of the $7.7
    billion allotted to security initiatives following the Sept. 11, 2001,
    terrorist attacks on the United States.
    
    She will zero in on the co-ordination of intelligence among
    departments and agencies, their ability to provide information to
    police, the state of fingerpring identification systems, and the
    assessment of airport workers who require clearances to restricted
    areas.
    
    McLellan, while acknowledging some security gaps remain, denied the
    private conversations of Canadian officials are falling into the wrong
    hands.
    
    "I'm not saying there are problems. This is about a continuous
    improvement, if you like," she told reporters. "We know since Sept. 11
    we live in a very unpredictable world."
    
    The government announced $605 million in new money for security over
    five years in its budget this week. It will go toward shoring up
    weaknesses at marine ports, better analysis of potential threats and
    investments in technology.
    
    The government will consult Canadians as it drafts a national security
    policy in coming months, McLellan promised.
    
    She also stressed ongoing co-operation with U.S. counterpart Tom Ridge
    on border security.
    
    Canada must refuse to be a weak link or a haven from which terrorists
    can attack others, she said.
    
    McLellan pointed to the terrorist bombs that ripped through commuter
    trains in Madrid two weeks ago, killing 190 people and injuring many
    others.
    
    "There are no direct or specific threats against Canada. But I think
    what Madrid tells us is a heightened state of vigilance and
    surveillance is absolutely key.
    
    "We cannot overreact, but we cannot be complacent."
    
    
    
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