Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Tory Opposition To Islamophobia Motion Is Stoking Prejudice: Muslim Leader

22 Feb, 2017 11:05 AM
    OTTAWA — Conservative MPs are stoking a wave of anti-Muslim sentiment by raising unfounded fears about a motion calling on the House of Commons to condemn Islamophobia, a Canadian Muslim leader said Tuesday.
     
    Samer Majzoub, president of the Canadian Muslim Forum, told a news conference that the Conservatives are trying to "delegitimize" and "degrade" the Liberal motion by presenting an alternative motion of their own that condemns all forms of racism, intolerance and discrimination against Muslims, Jews, Christians, Sikhs, Hindus and other religious groups — without mentioning the word Islamophobia.
     
    The Conservative motion was defeated a few hours later by a vote of 165-126, with the governing Liberals using their majority to block a united opposition front in favour of the motion.
     
    Majzoub said Muslim Canadians are increasingly suffering prejudice and acts of hatred — including a deadly shooting spree at a Quebec mosque last month that left six worshippers dead — and that the problem can't be tackled until it's recognized for what it is: Islamophobia.
     
    Conservative MPs have argued that the Liberal motion singles out one religious group over others and could potentially curtail Canadians' freedom to criticize any aspect of Islam because it doesn't define the term Islamophobia.
     
     
    Majzoub said those arguments are unfounded and are helping fuel anti-Muslim sentiment.
     
    "The fact that it was approached by some of the Opposition in this way has created all (these) xenophobic waves," Majzoub told The Canadian Press after the news conference.
     
    "Certainly, it did not help, the way they approached it."
     
    Conservative MP Tony Clement called Majzoub's accusation "an unfortunate interpretation" of what his party was trying to do.
     
    "Nothing could be further from the truth," he said. "I think we're trying to be fair to all people of faith in our society and I think that we're trying to recognize hatred directed against many faiths, including the Muslim faith."
     
    Majzoub pointed out that the Liberal motion, known as M-103 and introduced by Toronto-area MP Iqra Khalid, does not have the force of law and would simply instruct the Commons heritage committee to conduct a study on reducing systemic racism and religious discrimination, including Islamophobia, and collect data on hate crimes.
     
    The Conservative motion would have done the same, but without specific reference to Islamophobia.
     
     
    "This motion, unfortunately ... came as trying to delegitimize the M-103 and trying really to degrade this motion," Majzoub told the news conference, accusing the Tories of using Muslim Canadians as a "political football."
     
    "It is so, so sad that those political games are coming after a terrorist attack ... I just want to say to all those politicians ... what you are going to say to the 17 orphans that they cry every night for their fathers to be with them?"
     
    Majzoub said he's had calls from Muslim parents asking if it's safe to send their Canadian-born children to school.
     
    "We are a community under siege and this is not an exaggeration."
     
    Last year Majzoub initiated an electronic petition condemning Islamophobia that garnered almost 70,000 signatures. It was that petition which prompted Khalid to introduce her motion in December.
     
    She has rejected Conservative proposals to delete references to Islamophobia from her motion.
     
    New Democrat MP Matthew Dube accused both the Liberals and Conservatives of playing partisan games with the issue. His party's MPs voted in favour of the Tory motion and intend to support Khalid's motion as well.
     
    "I think both parties are guilty of trying to score their points. Nothing prevented the Liberals from being in favour of this motion and also being in favour of their own," he said.
     
    However, government House leader Bardish Chagger suggested that if the Conservative motion had passed, then Khalid's motion — which won't come to a vote until April — could have been ruled redundant, since the two are very similar.
     
    "Within the rules, you'll see that there is that possibility," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Revoked Nexus Trusted-traveller Cards Reinstated, At Least For Now: Minister

    Revoked Nexus Trusted-traveller Cards Reinstated, At Least For Now: Minister
       The federal public safety minister says revoked, trusted-traveller Nexus border cards held by about 200 Canadian permanent residents have been reinstated, at least for now.

    Revoked Nexus Trusted-traveller Cards Reinstated, At Least For Now: Minister

    In Canada, Dream Of Home Ownership Not So Much Far-flung As Just Far Away

    In Canada, Dream Of Home Ownership Not So Much Far-flung As Just Far Away
    TORONTO — Julien Simon and his wife were living happily in their condo in the Vancouver suburb of Burnaby when life intervened last year in the form of a baby on the way.

    In Canada, Dream Of Home Ownership Not So Much Far-flung As Just Far Away

    White House Says: Media Need To Cover Terrorism More, Cites Canadian Examples

    White House Says: Media Need To Cover Terrorism More, Cites Canadian Examples
    The White House wants journalists to write more stories about terrorist attacks, which President Donald Trump says are being under-reported.

    White House Says: Media Need To Cover Terrorism More, Cites Canadian Examples

    October Appeal Set For Const. James Forcillo, Convicted In Sammy Yatim Shooting

    October Appeal Set For Const. James Forcillo, Convicted In Sammy Yatim Shooting
    Const. James Forcillo was sentenced to six years in prison last July but has been granted bail while he appeals his case.

    October Appeal Set For Const. James Forcillo, Convicted In Sammy Yatim Shooting

    Canadian Cabinet Ministers Roll In For First Meetings In Trump's Washington

    Three ministers have meetings in Washington this week: Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland landed Tuesday for a two-day visit, just after her colleague Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan left town 

    Canadian Cabinet Ministers Roll In For First Meetings In Trump's Washington

    Vancouver, Toronto, Montreal Now Home To One-Third Of Canadians

    Vancouver, Toronto, Montreal Now Home To One-Third Of Canadians
    The latest figures also show that the once yawning gulf in growth rates between the spreading suburbs and their urban centres has continued to narrow, with young professionals and aging baby boomers alike opting for the downtown-condominium life.

    Vancouver, Toronto, Montreal Now Home To One-Third Of Canadians