Canada has listed Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
(IRGC) as a terrorist organization, after years of pressure from opposition
legislators and some members of the Iranian diaspora.
Announcing the decision on Wednesday, Public Safety Minister
Dominic LeBlanc called it a “significant tool in fighting global terrorism”.
The move will mean that thousands of senior Iranian
government officials, including top IRGC officials, will be barred from
entering Canada.
The IRGC is a major military, political and economic force
in Iran, with close ties to the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
It is estimated to have more than 190,000 active personnel
with its own ground forces, navy and air force that oversee Iran’s strategic
weapons.
The
IRGC exerts influence elsewhere in the Middle East by providing money, weapons,
technology, training and advice to allied governments and armed groups through
its shadowy overseas operations arm, the Quds (Jerusalem) Force, according to
the government.
The Quds Force was already listed as a terrorist group by
Canada, but Wednesday’s announcement extends the designation to the entire
IRGC.
Speaking to reporters, LeBlanc said the action “sends a
strong message that Canada will use all of the tools at its disposal to combat
the terrorist entity of the IRGC".
“The
Iranian regime has consistently displayed disregard for human rights, both
inside and outside of Iran as well as a willingness to destabilize the international
rules-based order,” he said.
After this designation, current and former senior Iranian
government officials already in Canada may also now be investigated and
removed.
Canada's foreign affairs minister, Melanie Joly, warned that Canadians in Iran
could be at risk of arbitrary detention following the announcement. “My message
is clear for those who are in Iran right now, it’s time to come back home,” she
said. “And for those who are planning to go to Iran, don’t go.”
The
Canadian government under the leadership of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau had
previously declined to extend the terrorism designation to the IRGC, despite
pressure from some diaspora members — including the families of those who died
after Flight PS752 was shot down by the IRGC in January 2020 in Tehran.
All 175 passengers onboard the plane were killed, including
55 Canadian citizens and 30 permanent residents of Canada.
Tehran
had claimed that the missile strike on the plane was done by mistake.
Trudeau had previously said in 2022 that he feared a
terrorism designation would unfairly target Iranians in Canada who opposed the
regime and fled, but had to serve in the IRGC in the past.
Asked why now by reporters, LeBlanc said the decision to designate a group as a
terrorist entity is a “deliberative process” made on advice of security
services and with foreign policy considerations.
“It is a threshold that must be met under the criminal code
of Canada,” he said.
The
move makes Canada the second country in North America after the US to label the
IRGC as a terrorist organization, which did so in 2019. The UK had previously
indicated its intent to make a similar move as recently as 2023, but has yet to
do so.