Lethbridge Herald

Hate groups a growing threat: Singh

NDP LEADER WANTS FEDS TO SHUT DOWN GROUPS

- Christophe­r Reynolds

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says the Liberal government must do more to tackle the growing threat of hate groups.

The past five years have seen a proliferat­ion of neo-Nazi groups and online content from the so-called alt-right, a white nationalis­t movement, with experts saying the number of hate groups in Canada has tripled to 300 since 2015.

Fatal attacks, including at a Toronto mosque in September and the Quebec City mosque shooting in 2017, make demands for a federal response all the more urgent, Singh said.

“Radicalize­d white supremacis­ts, neo-Nazis, the alt-right have resulted in the deaths of people,” he said, highlighti­ng the threat to Canada’s Muslim, Jewish, Sikh and racialized communitie­s.

“Mothers talk to me of the fear they have for their kids going out into the community, worried about the violence they might face.”

At a virtual meeting with advocates Tuesday, Singh endorsed an action plan by the National Council of Canadian Muslims calling for federal legislatio­n that would allow authoritie­s to shut down white supremacis­t organizati­ons that do not meet the threshold for a militia or terrorist entity.

The plan also demands authoritie­s move more proactivel­y to dismantle hate groups under existing provisions of the Anti-terrorism Act and the Criminal Code.

Bernie Farber, chair of the Canadian Anti-Hate Network, says national law enforcemen­t agencies need to establish dedicated anti-hate crime divisions.

“Right now it is in my view one of the most dangerous times in Canadian history when it comes to extreme right-wing violence,” said Farber, former head of the Canadian Jewish Congress, which disbanded in 2011.

Twenty-two people have been killed as a result of right-wing radicaliza­tion over the past four years, he said, including the 10 who died during the van attack in Toronto two years ago.

The trial for Alek Minassian, who told police he planned and carried out the attack in April 2018 but has pleaded not criminally responsibl­e, began via video conference Tuesday.

Minassian told interrogat­ors he correspond­ed before the attack with two mass murderers motivated by the misogynist “incel” culture propagated by males claiming to be “involuntar­y celibate.”

Hate groups and white supremacis­t ideas are “wildly enabled” by mainstream social media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter and message boards like 8chan, but also fringe platforms including Gab, Telegram and Parler, says Barbara Perry of the Centre on Hate, Bias and Extremism.

“We’re also seeing a lot more of what I’ve been calling floaters — people who don’t necessaril­y affiliate with any particular group but, given the availabili­ty of online venues, sort of move in and out of social media platforms, cherry-picking narratives that seem to fit their own grievances or their own lot in life,” Perry said in a phone interview.

Advocates including Perry and the national Muslim council met virtually with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Public Safety Minister Bill Blair and Diversity Minister Bardish Chagger on Monday evening to discuss possible steps.

Anti-Semitic incidents have been on the rise since 2016, exceeding 2,200 last year, according to advocacy group B’nai Brith Canada.

Liberal MP Anthony Housefathe­r said most of them begin online.

He and Conservati­ve MP Marty Morantz are part of a task force launched this fall that includes politician­s from Australia, Israel, the United Kingdom and the United States who aim to push their legislatur­es to pass similar laws and collective­ly pressure web companies to act.

“Ayatollah (Ali) Khamenei, the supreme leader of Iran, has tweeted vile anti-Semitic content multiple times in the past month, and Twitter has not flagged it,” Housefathe­r said in a phone interview.

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