Saturday, June 20, 2026
ADVT 
National

Journalism has made some targets in Canada as well

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jan, 2015 02:45 PM

    Ottawa teenager Nora Sharmarke was only ten when her journalist father, Canadian Al Iman Sharmarke, was killed over his coverage of Islamic extremism in his native country of Somalia.

    For Sharmarke, the targeted attack Wednesday against the journalists of Charlie Hebdo magazine in Paris hits close to home. The aspiring nurse said she understands the motivation of such reporters to take the risks they do — her father's final words were that his attackers would not silence him.

    "It's absolutely astonishing that the people who committed these crimes claim to do it in the name of the religion that I follow, that my father followed. It's disgusting," said Sharmarke, 17.

    "He lived and died for freedom of expression, just to see this happening is devastating."

    Al-Shabaab member Hassan Hanafi Haji was arrested last summer in connection with Sharmarke's murder and that of several other reporters fighting for free expression in Somalia.

    Al Iman Sharmarke is just one of several Canadian journalists who have faced threats and violence over the years, at home and abroad.

    Former Journal de Montreal reporter Michel Auger, who covered the crime beat including Quebec's biker gangs, survived being shot six times outside the newspaper's offices in 2000.

    Tara Singh Hayer, founder of the Indo-Canadian Times, was assassinated in Surrey, B.C. in 1998. He had been an outspoken critic of Sikh separatist extremism, and had been trying to help bring to justice the terrorists behind the 1985 Air India bombing.

    "You can't allow this to discourage you because journalists do a very important job to keep our democracy alive," son and MLA Dave Hayer told the Vancouver Sun this week. "We have to encourage and support our journalists all over in all different types of media."

    Vancouver Sun reporter Kim Bolan, who has also investigated Sikh extremism, received faced numerous threats as she delved into the Air India file, as did the CBC's Terry Milewski.

    "I didn't want to bend to that, because obviously if more journalists would get threatened, it would be a successful strategy," said Bolan, who still receives threats as a crime reporter covering Vancouver's gang scene.

    "I felt obligated to carry on."

    Bolan reports some threats to authorities, and she's had different levels of police protection over the years. But she says it's often difficult in today's era of social media to suss out which ones to be afraid of — an issue she thinks newsrooms should be actively discussing.

    The veteran reporter also worries about an attitude that views journalists as responsible for the danger they encounter — a notion that has crept into discussion over Charlie Hebdo and its provocative cartoons.

    "I also think that sometimes police tend to dismiss threats that journalists receive because we're the kind of people that are walking into trouble — 'Well, you can mitigate the problem if you just walk away from trouble,' but we do have the constitutional right to do our jobs."

    Nora Sharmarke in Ottawa says that although her father, and so many other journalists last decade, were killed for their work, he was right about not being silenced.

    Al Iman Sharmarke had started up a media network called HornAfrik and hosted a radio show. His family now helps to train journalists who want to work there.

    "Now today in Somalia there are broadcasting corporations all around, and that wasn't the case when he started HornAfrik," she said.

    "He had the first radio station in Somalia, broadcasting across Somalia. What he did really lived on."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    High court rules threats of violence can be used for dangerous offender status

    High court rules threats of violence can be used for dangerous offender status
    OTTAWA - The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that threats of violence in themselves are a form of violence and can be used to determine whether someone should go to prison indefinitely.

    High court rules threats of violence can be used for dangerous offender status

    PEI joins national securities regulator plan, five provinces now on board

    PEI joins national securities regulator plan, five provinces now on board
    OTTAWA - Prince Edward Island has joined Ottawa's move to create a national securities regulator, bringing the total to five provinces who have signed onto the plan.

    PEI joins national securities regulator plan, five provinces now on board

    Canadians are Increasingly Googling on their Smartphones as they Shop

    Canadians are Increasingly Googling on their Smartphones as they Shop
    TORONTO - Most Canadians will be armed with their smartphones while shopping this holiday season and likely won't pull the trigger on purchases without launching a few quick searches first, suggests new research released Thursday.

    Canadians are Increasingly Googling on their Smartphones as they Shop

    NDP staffers join new union, split with Unifor over strategic voting

    NDP staffers join new union, split with Unifor over strategic voting
    OTTAWA - More than 600 federal NDP political staffers have chosen a new union home that will give unequivocal support to their party.

    NDP staffers join new union, split with Unifor over strategic voting

    Polaris Prize Winner Tanya Tagaq Says She Was Racially, Sexually Harassed in Winnipeg

    Polaris Prize Winner Tanya Tagaq Says She Was Racially, Sexually Harassed in Winnipeg
    WINNIPEG - A prize-winning throat singer says she was sexually harassed and called "a sexy little Indian" while in the Manitoba capital recently.

    Polaris Prize Winner Tanya Tagaq Says She Was Racially, Sexually Harassed in Winnipeg

    Conservatives proposing plan to allow use of journalistic work in political ads

    Conservatives proposing plan to allow use of journalistic work in political ads
    OTTAWA - The Conservative cabinet is considering a plan that would allow political parties to use the work of journalists in its political advertising without permission or compensation.

    Conservatives proposing plan to allow use of journalistic work in political ads