Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. woman arrested over speech that praised Hamas attack

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 May, 2024 01:08 PM
  • B.C. woman arrested over speech that praised Hamas attack

Police say a 44-year-old woman has been arrested in a hate-crime investigation over a speech in Vancouver that praised the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas on Israel.

A statement from the Vancouver Police Department said that the woman "referred to a number of terrorist organizations as heroes." 

It said a criminal investigation was underway to determine if her comments violated hate-crime laws.

The speech outside the Vancouver Art Gallery on Friday drew condemnation from Premier David Eby, Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim and others.

The police statement on Wednesday said the investigation was launched on the day of the speech, and the suspect had been released from custody while the inquiry continued.

Video of the rally at the art gallery shows a woman leading the crowd in a chant of "long live Oct. 7" and calling the attackers "heroic and brave."

Eby said Monday that the comments about the attack that killed about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, were "the most hateful" he could imagine.

Sgt. Steve Addison said in the VPD statement that police "defend everyone’s right to gather and express their opinions, even when those opinions are unpopular or controversial."

“We also have a responsibility to ensure public comments don’t promote or incite hatred, encourage violence, or make people feel unsafe," he said.

"We will continue to thoroughly investigate every hate incident and will pursue criminal charges whenever there is evidence of a hate crime.”

The statement said video of the suspect's speech had been "widely shared on social media and viewed several hundred thousand times."

"Once the investigation is complete, the evidence will be presented to Crown for their assessment," the statement said.

Eby said previously of the speech that "celebrating the murder, the rape of innocent people attending a music festival, it's awful."

"It's reprehensible, and it shouldn't take place in British Columbia," he said. "There is clearly an element of some individuals using an international tragedy to promote hate that's completely unacceptable."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Western Community Colleges launches new aviation training program at Abbotsford International Airport

Western Community Colleges launches new aviation training program at Abbotsford International Airport
Western Community College’s new aviation training programs such as the cabin crew program are IATA certified, while their commercial and private pilot licenses, and night rating programs are Transport Canada certified. WCC plans to introduce additional IATA certified airline operations training programs in the near future. WCC’s new aviation training programs will be located at the college’s new aviation wing at the Abbotsford International Airport. 

Western Community Colleges launches new aviation training program at Abbotsford International Airport

Shipping container stolen from Abbotsford

Shipping container stolen from Abbotsford
Police in Abbotsford say an elaborate operation would have been needed to steal a large shipping container from a rural property this week. The department says the 12-metre long container disappeared during daylight hours on Monday.

Shipping container stolen from Abbotsford

Joly urges halt to escalating violence as Israel suspected of airstrike on Iran

Joly urges halt to escalating violence as Israel suspected of airstrike on Iran
Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly is once again urging Israel and Iran to prevent their long-running conflict from spiralling into a broader Middle East crisis. She is calling for de-escalation and has co-signed a lengthy statement that touches on the Israel-Hamas war, the humanitarian plight in Gaza and attacks on ships off the coast of Yemen.  

Joly urges halt to escalating violence as Israel suspected of airstrike on Iran

'No immediate risk' from 2.5-million-litre effluent spill from B.C. fibreboard plant

'No immediate risk' from 2.5-million-litre effluent spill from B.C. fibreboard plant
British Columbia's Environment Ministry says a 2.5-million-litre effluent spill from a fibreboard factory in Quesnel doesn't pose any immediate risk to public safety. It says in a statement that Monday's spill from the WestPine Medium-Density Fibreboard plant into a gravel pit has been assessed and no waterways have been affected.

'No immediate risk' from 2.5-million-litre effluent spill from B.C. fibreboard plant

Changes for short-term rentals as of May 1st

Changes for short-term rentals as of May 1st
The BC government says analysis of short-term rental data from March showed that more than 19-thousand entire homes in the province are listed for rent for most of the year.  That figure will change starting May 1st, when the new short-term rental rules kick in for more than 60 communities in B-C. 

Changes for short-term rentals as of May 1st

Labour leader urges unions to expose Poilievre's working-class overtures as 'fraud'

Labour leader urges unions to expose Poilievre's working-class overtures as 'fraud'
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is a "fraud" for portraying himself as a friend of the working class, the head of the country's largest labour organization said Thursday, urging unions to do everything they can to expose him before the next federal election. Canadian Labour Congress President Bea Bruske delivered her call to arms as union leaders gathered in Ottawa to plot strategy ahead of the vote, which must happen before October 2025. 

Labour leader urges unions to expose Poilievre's working-class overtures as 'fraud'