Go to The Globe and Mail

 

Blogs

Danish police officers stand guard outside the Canadian embassy in Copenhagen on Monday, December 14, 2009.

Monday, December 14, 2009 3:27 PM

'More will be revealed tomorrow,'
climate prankster says

Jane Taber

Environment Minister Jim Prentice is not having a good day today in Copenhagen. It started with an embarrassing fake press release announcing Canada had bold, ambitious greenhouse gas emissions-reduction targets.

It appeared that the press release had made it on to various websites but those websites, including one purporting to be the Wall Street Journal’s European edition, were part of the hoax, too.

And then a second press release saying the first press release was a hoax was also a hoax. What a schmozzle.

Then there was a video that appeared on what appeared to be the UN conference’s website from the Ugandan delegation reacting to the fake press release announcing Canada’s bold new targets. In it, a Ugandan woman congratulates Canada for its new targets but criticizes the Canadian government for taking so much time to change its targets:

“It’s high time Canada changed,” said the woman, who was identified as Margaret Matembe. She accused Canada of refusing to negotiate at the conference, having held a “gun” to everyone’s head, saying “you left us no choice but to see you as criminals.”

That video is fake, too.

It’s not clear who is behind all this but the suspicion is that it is the work of an American group called the Yes Men. They have pulled these sorts of stunts before, attacking the corporate world and globalization through their spoofs, which include making websites look authentic. The Yes Men, according to their spokespeople in the United States, are in Copenhagen and they are tweeting about the spoof.

"Yes, we have heard a bit about this hoax, we are investigating," Joseph Huff-Hannon, who works with the group, told The Globe in an email. "Word has it that more will be revealed tomorrow at 13:00 pm Copenhagen time. I hear that those responsible can't speak about it tonight though."

Meanwhile, to add to Mr. Prentice’s bad day there is a report in the Toronto Star that U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu snubbed the Environment Minister and didn’t want to have his picture taken with him at a photo op. This is important as the Harper government has made so much of the fact that it is twinning its climate-change plan with that of the Obama administration. Mr. Prentice's staff, however, did manage to snap a photo of the two men chatting.

And we’re not finished: Dimtri Soudas, the Prime Minister’s spokesman, who is in Copenhagen with Mr. Prentice (is the PMO worried about this file?), had suggested that the original fake press release was the work of Steven Guilbeault, the co-founder and deputy director of Équiterre. The group sent out their own press release (which we believe to be authentic) saying that Mr. Soudas “should stop throwing baseless accusations.”

They want him to retract his accusations. “A better way to use his time would probably be to advise the Canadian government to change its deeply flawed position on climate,” says the release. It says that Mr. Guilbeault was not behind the spoof.

Mr. Soudas, who was caught on CBC video having a heated conversation with Mr. Guilbeault, scoffed at Equiterre’s request for an apology. “This is another PR stunt,” he told The Globe.

What a day.

Latest Comments

Ottawa Notebook Contributors

Jane Taber, senior political writer

Jane Taber

Jane Taber has been on Parliament Hill since the Mulroney days, first writing for the Ottawa Citizen in 1986. Since then, she's reported for a small television network, WTN, and for the National Post before joining The Globe’s parliamentary bureau in 2002. She is the senior political writer and also co-host of Question Period, which airs Sundays on CTV.

 
John Ibbitson

John Ibbitson

John Ibbitson started at The Globe in 1999 and has been Queen's Park columnist and Ottawa political affairs correspondent. Most recently, he was a correspondent and columnist in Washington, where he wrote Open and Shut: Why America has Barack Obama and Canada has Stephen Harper. He returned to Ottawa as bureau chief in 2009. Before joining The Globe, he worked as a reporter, columnist and Queen’s Park correspondent for Southam papers.

 

Steven Chase

Steven Chase has covered federal politics in Ottawa for The Globe since mid-2001. He's previously worked in the paper's Vancouver and Calgary bureaus. Prior to that, he reported on Alberta politics for the Calgary Herald and the Calgary Sun, and on national issues for Alberta Report. He's had ink-stained hands for far longer though, having worked as a paperboy for the (now defunct) Montreal Star, the Winnipeg Free Press, the Vancouver Sun and the North Shore News.

 
Deputy Ottawa bureau chief Campbell Clark

Campbell Clark

Campbell Clark has been a political writer in The Globe and Mail’s Ottawa bureau since 2000. Before that he worked for The Montreal Gazette and the National Post. He writes about Canadian politics and foreign policy. He stopped being fascinated by ShamWow commercials after that guy’s nasty incident in Florida, but still wonders if one can really pull a truck with that Mighty Putty stuff.

 

Bill Curry

A member of the Parliamentary Press Gallery since 1999, Bill Curry worked for The Hill Times and the National Post prior to joining The Globe in Feb. 2005. Originally from North Bay, Ont., Bill reports on a wide range of topics on Parliament Hill. He is very protective of the office’s brand new copy of O’Brien & Bosc, the latest Parliamentary rule book.

 

Gloria Galloway

Gloria Galloway has been a journalist for almost 30 years. She worked at the Windsor Star, the Hamilton Spectator, the National Post, the Canadian Press and a number of small newspapers before being hired by The Globe and Mail as deputy national editor in 2001. Gloria returned to reporting two years later and joined the Ottawa bureau in 2004. She has covered every federal election since 1997 and has done several stints in Afghanistan.

 

Daniel Leblanc

Daniel Leblanc studied political science at the University of Ottawa and journalism at Carleton University. He became a full-time reporter in 1998, first at the Ottawa Citizen and then in the Ottawa bureau of The Globe and Mail. While he likes the occasional brown envelope, he is also open to anonymous emails.

 

Stephen Wicary

Stephen Wicary has been with The Globe since 2001, working on the news desk as a copy editor, page designer, production editor and front page editor. During the U.S invasion of Iraq, he pulled a three-month stint as overnight editor of the website. He moved to the parliamentary bureau at the end of 2008 to bolster online political coverage.