Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Hateful Messages Flood Quebec Premier's Facebook Page After He Supports Muslims

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Jan, 2020 09:45 PM

    ST-SAUVEUR, Que. - Quebec cabinet ministers are speaking out about a deluge of hateful comments posted to the premier's Facebook page after he published a message in support of the province's Muslim community.

     

    Premier Francois Legault attended a ceremony Wednesday on the third anniversary of the Quebec City mosque shooting that left six men dead.

     

    Later that evening, a message was posted to Legault's official Facebook page stating that Quebec is not immune to hatred, but its people stand in solidarity with Muslims in the province.

     

    Since then, the premier's page has been flooded with hateful comments targeting the community.

     

    Transport Minister Francois Bonnardel, Economy Minister Pierre Fitzgibbon and International Relations Minister Nadine Girault all condemned the comments Friday at their party's caucus retreat north of Montreal.

     

    Bonnardel says some people in the province need to be better educated.

     

    "There is some pedagogy that needs to be done," he told reporters in St-Sauveur, Que. "There is a problem with certain people who dare to think that, who dare to write that."

     

    Fitzgibbon said Quebecers "need to accept diversity."

     

    Legault sent a written statement to Montreal's La Presse, saying, "hate and intolerance do not have their place in Quebec."

     

    In November, Legault cited positive comments on his Facebook page to justify his government's controversial immigration reforms, but in his statement to La Presse he noted that "the best and the worst of human nature" are on display on social media.

     

    "There is a small minority of people who systematically use social media as a megaphone to propagate their hatred," he said. "We have to denounce them. They do not represent Quebec."

     

    The premier's staff worked to remove the offensive posts, but as of Friday morning new ones were still appearing.

     

    About 300 people, including politicians, survivors and gun control activists, gathered in a Quebec City church Wednesday to remember the victims of the 2017 shooting.

     

    The gunman pleaded guilty to the killings and last year was sentenced to life in prison without possibility of parole for 40 years.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Texas Murder Suspect Arrested In Halifax To Be Detained Until February

    Texas Murder Suspect Arrested In Halifax To Be Detained Until February
    An American murder suspect nabbed in Halifax will remain detained until February, when he'll have another hearing to determine whether he's admissible to Canada, a member of the Immigration and Review Board ruled Friday.    

    Texas Murder Suspect Arrested In Halifax To Be Detained Until February

    Trump, Seeking Support, Headlines Anti-Abortion Rally In Washington

    Trump, Seeking Support, Headlines Anti-Abortion Rally In Washington
    Donald Trump, anxious to buttress his political bona fides with evangelical Christian voters, was a surprise headliner at Friday's March for Life rally in Washington, calling it his "profound honour" to be the first sitting U.S. president ever to attend.

    Trump, Seeking Support, Headlines Anti-Abortion Rally In Washington

    Memo To Trudeau Prods Liberals To Look At Reviving Vice-Regal Appointments Board

    Memo To Trudeau Prods Liberals To Look At Reviving Vice-Regal Appointments Board
    Senior officials advising Prime Minister Justin Trudeau have pressed him gently to rethink how the Liberals have chosen the Queen's representatives in Canada as he gets ready to make another such decision.

    Memo To Trudeau Prods Liberals To Look At Reviving Vice-Regal Appointments Board

    People Knowingly Take Fentanyl So Make Policy Changes To Reduce Harm: B.C. Study

    A study suggests illicit drug users in British Columbia are knowingly using the potentially deadly opioid fentanyl so making them aware of its presence in the drug supply isn't enough.    

    People Knowingly Take Fentanyl So Make Policy Changes To Reduce Harm: B.C. Study

    I Would Not Go' To China Says B.C. Resident Concerned About Coronavirus

    A woman who has regularly visited China from her home in Delta, B.C., says she would not travel there over concerns about a new coronavirus that is spreading beyond the city that officials have closed to try to contain the mysterious illness.    

    I Would Not Go' To China Says B.C. Resident Concerned About Coronavirus

    Indigenous Youth Chant 'Stand Up, Fight Back' At B.C. Anti-Pipeline Protest

    Indigenous Youth Chant 'Stand Up, Fight Back' At B.C. Anti-Pipeline Protest
    The protest comes two days after Indigenous youth occupied a B.C. government Energy and Mines Ministry office that ended when Victoria police arrested 13 people.

    Indigenous Youth Chant 'Stand Up, Fight Back' At B.C. Anti-Pipeline Protest