Wednesday, July 2, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canadians Will Never Be Able To Tackle Hatred Against Muslims Without Naming Problem: Iqra Khalid

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Feb, 2017 11:04 AM
    OTTAWA — Canadians will never be able to tackle hatred and discrimination against Muslims without naming the problem for what it is, says Liberal MP Iqra Khalid.
     
    "Words have impact," the Mississauga MP said Wednesday in the House of Commons as she opened the debate over her non-binding motion to condemn Islamophobia and all other forms of racism and religious discrimination.
     
    "When we as a government stand together and condemn intolerance manifested through racism and religious discrimination, we can begin to tackle the issue."
     
    The Liberals have endorsed Khalid's motion, which calls on the government to "recognize the need to quell the increasing public climate of hate and fear" and condemn Islamophobia, as well as all other kinds of "systemic racism and religious discrimination."
     
    If the motion, known as M-103, is passed, the Commons heritage committee would also be asked to study the issue and develop a strategy to tackle it.
     
     
    Heritage Minister Melanie Joly said passing the non-binding motion would send a strong message about discrimination against the Muslim community, particularly in light of the recent deadly attack on a mosque in Quebec City.
     
    "We overwhelmingly reject the politics of racism and exclusion," Joly said outside the Commons, where she was surrounded by Liberal MPs and cabinet ministers to demonstrate that no one in the Liberal caucus would likely oppose it.
     
    A number of Conservative MPs — including leadership hopefuls — have called for the motion to be more inclusive, warning it risks stifling freedom of expression by preventing criticism of elements of Islam or Muslim culture, such as the face-covering veil known as the niqab.
     
     
    Conservative MP David Anderson called it problematic that the motion does not define Islamophobia.
     
    "Some apply the term only to serious acts of hostility, while others apply it to every critique and every act against Islam," Anderson said during the debate.
     
    The Conservatives want the reference to Islamophobia dropped, but Khalid told the Commons that it's important to describe mounting levels of racism and hate crimes against Muslims for what it is.
     
    "I will not do so anymore than I would speak to the Holocaust and not mention that the overwhelming majority of victims were six million followers of the Jewish faith and that anti-Semitism was the root cause of the Holocaust," she said.
     
    "We cannot address a problem if we fail to call it by its true name."
     
     
    Last year, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau faced criticism for not having specifically referenced Jewish victims in his statement marking International Holocaust Remembrance Day.
     
    Trudeau did not repeat the same omission this year, but U.S. President Donald Trump did and his administration stood by the choice of words.
     
    Conservative leadership candidate Kellie Leitch, meanwhile, tweeted a link to a petition against M-103 featuring the image of young white female — tape over her mouth emblazoned with the name of the motion — over a blurred background image of police officers, guns drawn, responding to the Parliament Hill shooting in October 2014.
     
    Leitch's office did not respond to a request for comment.
     
    Khalid said the motion would not touch on freedom of expression, but would in fact bolster it by hearing from racial and religious minorities who feel their freedom of expression is currently curtailed.
     
    "To recognize where we currently have a blind spot, where we 'other' certain Canadian voices can only result in an enrichment of our multicultural, secular national conversation," she said.
     
    Khalid, a Muslim, said her own experience with Islamophobia over the past few weeks has convinced her to press ahead.
     
    "Over the past few weeks, I along with some of my colleagues, have been the recipients of hateful comments," she said. "This strengthens my resolve to continue to combat this issue."
     
    NDP Leader Tom Mulcair said he thinks the motion is important, but also wants to see Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the Liberals specifically criticize U.S. President Donald Trump for the anti-Muslim nature of some of his rhetoric and policy proposals.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Coquitlam RCMP Warn Of Romance Fraudster Targeting Metro Vancouver Women

    Coquitlam RCMP Warn Of Romance Fraudster Targeting Metro Vancouver Women
    The man, described as about 45 years old, with dark brown hair, a trim beard and blue eyes, stayed at the victim's home but police say the woman never saw his car or went to his residence.

    Coquitlam RCMP Warn Of Romance Fraudster Targeting Metro Vancouver Women

    21 People Arrested For Illegally Crossing Border At Emerson, Manitoba: RCMP

    21 People Arrested For Illegally Crossing Border At Emerson, Manitoba: RCMP
    EMERSON, Man. — The Mounties say 21 people crossed the border illegally overnight near a Manitoba community where there has been a surge in people seeking asylum.

    21 People Arrested For Illegally Crossing Border At Emerson, Manitoba: RCMP

    New Provincial Tax Credit Announced For B.C. Search And Rescue, Fire Volunteers

    New Provincial Tax Credit Announced For B.C. Search And Rescue, Fire Volunteers
    VANCOUVER — The province has announced a new tax credit for the more than 7,000 volunteers who save lives across British Columbia.

    New Provincial Tax Credit Announced For B.C. Search And Rescue, Fire Volunteers

    Watch Video: 1 Dead, 4 Injured In Accident At Canada 150 Event In Singapore

    Watch Video: 1 Dead, 4 Injured  In Accident At Canada 150 Event In Singapore
    The federal government says the person killed and four others injured were not Canadian.

    Watch Video: 1 Dead, 4 Injured In Accident At Canada 150 Event In Singapore

    Canadians Protest Liberals' Broken Electoral Reform Promise Across The Country

    TORONTO — Protesters staged demonstrations across Canada Saturday to attack the governing Liberals' decision to abandon their promise of electoral reform.

    Canadians Protest Liberals' Broken Electoral Reform Promise Across The Country

    Mother Of Two Dies After Being Struck On B.C.’s Highway 1 While Helping Other Crash

    Mother Of Two Dies After Being Struck On B.C.’s Highway 1 While Helping Other Crash
    Anna Grandia and her husband, Matthew Grandia, had pulled over on the TransCanada Highway west of Hope, B.C., last Sunday to assist in clearing the scene of an accident when they were both struck by another vehicle that lost control.  

    Mother Of Two Dies After Being Struck On B.C.’s Highway 1 While Helping Other Crash