Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Hate Crime Dropped 17 Per Cent Between 2012 And 2013, Police Say

The Canadian Press, 09 Jun, 2015 11:44 AM
    OTTAWA — Statistics Canada says the number of hate crimes reported to police in 2013 dropped by 17 per cent from 2012.
     
    The agency says police reported 1,167 hate crimes in 2013, 247 fewer than the year before.
     
    It says the decline was mainly attributable to a 30-per-cent drop in non-violent hate crime incidents, primarily mischief.
     
    The report says hate crimes motivated by hatred of race or ethnicity represented about 51 per cent of the total.
     
    Religious hate crimes accounted for 28 per cent, while 16 per cent were crimes motivated by hatred of a sexual orientation.
     
    Racial or ethnic hate crimes dropped 17 per cent between 2012 and 2013, with the largest declines coming in incidents targeting Arab, West Asian and black populations.
     
    There were small increases in reported hate crimes against East and Southeast Asian populations as well as whites.
     
    Black populations were still the most frequent target of hate crimes, with 22 per cent of all incidents.
     
    Religion-motivated hate crime incidents were down 22 per cent from 2013, with drops in hate crimes targeting every religious group except Muslim populations. There were 20 more incidents reported against Muslims compared with 2012.
     
    Still, hate crimes aimed at Jewish populations were the most common religiously motivated crimes, making up 16 per cent of all hate crimes.
     
    There were 186 police-reported hate crime incidents in 2013 that were motivated by sexual orientation, one more than a year earlier.
     
    The survey said 60 per cent of hate-motivated crimes reported by police involved non-violent offences, with mischief, including vandalism, graffiti and other forms of property destruction, the most commonly reported offence.
     
    Almost three-quarters of religious hate crimes involved mischief.
     
    While four in 10 hate crimes were violent, these were primarily incidents of common assault or uttering threats.
     
    Two-thirds of hate crimes involving sexual orientation were violent, compared with 44 per cent of racial or ethnic hatred crimes and 18 per cent of religious hate crimes.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    More Rebel Fighters Needed To Aid Air Campaign, Says Syrian Canadian Activist

    More Rebel Fighters Needed To Aid Air Campaign, Says Syrian Canadian Activist
    OTTAWA — A leading Canadian activist for Syria says it is time to step up the training of a rebel force capable of leading a ground war against both Islamic militants and the Assad government in Damascus.

    More Rebel Fighters Needed To Aid Air Campaign, Says Syrian Canadian Activist

    From Cradle To Grave: New Brunswick Sees More Deaths Than Births For First Time

    From Cradle To Grave: New Brunswick Sees More Deaths Than Births For First Time
    FREDERICTON — Coles Island School in New Brunswick has taught children for 58 years but this may be its last. Over time, enrolment has dwindled to a point where the school now teaches 30 students from kindergarten to Grade 5. 

    From Cradle To Grave: New Brunswick Sees More Deaths Than Births For First Time

    Tories To Tackle Thorny Issue Of Lump Sum Payments To Wounded Veterans: Sources

    Tories To Tackle Thorny Issue Of Lump Sum Payments To Wounded Veterans: Sources
    OTTAWA — The system of awards for the pain and suffering of the country's most severely wounded soldiers is about to be overhauled as the Harper government attempts to defuse a volatile issue within the angry veterans community.

    Tories To Tackle Thorny Issue Of Lump Sum Payments To Wounded Veterans: Sources

    Avoiding Syrian Air Defences A Concern As Commons Set To Approve War Expansion

    Avoiding Syrian Air Defences A Concern As Commons Set To Approve War Expansion
    OTTAWA — How to avoid missile batteries and navigate defensive radar systems in Syria are among the issues preoccupying military planners as Parliament debates the merits of expanding and extending Canada's Middle East mission.

    Avoiding Syrian Air Defences A Concern As Commons Set To Approve War Expansion

    Vancouver Shares Olympic Lessons With Toronto Ahead Of Pan Am Games

    Vancouver Shares Olympic Lessons With Toronto Ahead Of Pan Am Games
    TORONTO — In their effort to fight congestion during this summer's Pan Am and Parapan Am Games, organizers in Ontario are taking cues from those who have been there, done that.

    Vancouver Shares Olympic Lessons With Toronto Ahead Of Pan Am Games

    Ken Dryden Teaches Class Of The Future To Five Universities Simultaneously

    Ken Dryden Teaches Class Of The Future To Five Universities Simultaneously
    Ken Dryden sits in a classroom at McGill University in Montreal ready to talk to students about the future. His face beams into four other classrooms across the country.

    Ken Dryden Teaches Class Of The Future To Five Universities Simultaneously