Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
International

Quebec City's Outspoken Talk-Radio Hosts Face Backlash After Mosque Shooting

The Canadian Press, 02 Feb, 2017 12:53 PM
    MONTREAL — In the soul-searching that has followed Sunday's deadly mass shooting at a Quebec City mosque, the city's controversial talk-radio hosts are facing a backlash for allegedly fanning the flames of Islamophobia and intolerance. 
     
    Little is known about what factors may have influenced the person who entered the mosque and shot six people to death.
     
    But that hasn't stopped critics from questioning whether Quebec City's fondness for a brand of American-style conservative talk radio that critics have dubbed "radio poubelle" or "trash radio" may have helped to foster a climate of intolerance where such acts could take place.
     
    The small number of hosts pride themselves on a provocative, anything-goes style whose commentary often targets women's groups, the LGBT community, environmentalists and Muslims, according to Colette Brin of Universite Laval's communications department.
     
    "There's this strong discourse (against) people who they see as wanting to change society, who are asking for special rights," Brin said in a telephone interview. "In the case we're looking at, there's the fear of Islamic terrorism and the generalization that the Muslims' Islamic faith in general is the problem."
     
     
    At a Monday vigil, Quebec City Mayor Regis Labeaume said he hoped one of the consequences of the tragedy would be a rejection of "those who enrich themselves with hate." 
     
    When asked Wednesday to clarify his comments, Labeaume neither confirmed nor denied he was referring specifically to talk radio.
     
    But in the wake of the tragedy, Labeaume hasn't been the only one questioning the tone of heated public debate on issues such as religious accommodation.
     
    Several speakers at a Montreal vigil on Monday called out politicians and media personalities for fostering divisive debates for their own benefit.
     
    "The business of Islamophobia is very lucrative, and certain will defend it tooth and nail," Asmaa Ibnouzahir said onstage.
     
    Under a barrage of online criticism, some of those hosts have taken to the airwaves to say it's unfair to blame them for the actions of one individual.
     
     
    "We're starting to stir the pot to find someone to hold responsible," Jeff Fillion told a panel discussion on CHOI 98.1. "I find it irresponsible, adolescent."
     
    According to Fillion, there is "only one person responsible, and he's behind bars," he said.
     
    Andre Arthur, the former Independent Quebec MP who Brin describes as the "father" of Quebec's talk radio, also denounced what he called "the wave of self-blame that has hit the province since Sunday night."
     
    "I hope one day we'll have the wisdom to see that mental illness doesn't need to be explained," he said during a segment on his show.
     
    Brin said while hosts such as Fillion and Arthur can be accused of "feeding and lending legitimacy" to existing attitudes, it is unfair to single them out for criticism or imply they bear any responsibility for Sunday's massacre.
     
    Instead, she hopes the tragedy will prompt a wider discussion about responsible public discourse.
     
    "Certain people have responsibilities toward the public in what they say and how they say things," she said. "I think it's a good time to think about the weight of our words and the weight of our attitudes toward other people."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian-Origin Man Found Guilty Of Bribing Over $ 2 Million To Mexican Officials

    Indian-Origin Man Found Guilty Of Bribing Over $ 2 Million To Mexican Officials
    An Indian-origin man was found guilty of bribing Mexican officials to secure contracts, Assistant Attorney General Leslie Caldwell has said.

    Indian-Origin Man Found Guilty Of Bribing Over $ 2 Million To Mexican Officials

    Gloomy Start To Year Of Rooster As Bird Flu Hits South Korea

    Gloomy Start To Year Of Rooster As Bird Flu Hits South Korea
    SEOUL, Korea, Republic Of — The year of the rooster looks set for a gloomy start. Egg prices are soaring and new year's festivals are being cancelled as South Korea fights its worst bird flu outbreak in a decade.

    Gloomy Start To Year Of Rooster As Bird Flu Hits South Korea

    Teen Allegedly Confined In 8X8 Pit, Raped For Over 3 Weeks In Gujarat

    Teen Allegedly Confined In 8X8 Pit, Raped For Over 3 Weeks In Gujarat
    In a shocking incident, a 15-year-old girl was allegedly kidnapped and forcibly confined in a farm pit for over three weeks in November and raped repeatedly by a teenager at Kotda Nayani village of Morbi district in Gujarat before she was freed earlier this month, police said today.

    Teen Allegedly Confined In 8X8 Pit, Raped For Over 3 Weeks In Gujarat

    China Plans To Become 1st Country To Land On Far Side Of Moon

    China today said it will launch a lunar probe in 2018 to achieve the world's first soft landing on the far side of the moon to showcase its ambitious space programme.

    China Plans To Become 1st Country To Land On Far Side Of Moon

    Pak Defence Minister Reads Fake News, Threatens Israel With Nuke Strike

    Pak Defence Minister Reads Fake News, Threatens Israel With Nuke Strike
    "Israeli def min threatens nuclear retaliation presuming pak role in Syria against Daesh," the minister wrote on his official Twitter account, using an Arabic acronym for ISIS. "Israel forgets Pakistan is a Nuclear state too."

    Pak Defence Minister Reads Fake News, Threatens Israel With Nuke Strike

    Indian Boy Run Over By Car In Dubai

    Indian Boy Run Over By Car In Dubai
    A six-year-old Indian boy died here when he was run over by a car, the media reported on Sunday.

    Indian Boy Run Over By Car In Dubai