Medicine Hat News

Iqra Khalid urges fellow MPs to take unified approach in Islamophob­ia study

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OTTAWA The inclusion of the phrase Islamophob­ia in a hotly debated motion passed by the House of Commons last year was meant as an example of forms of racism, the Liberal MP who sponsored the proposal said Monday.

Iqra Khalid told the House of Commons heritage committee that her motion calling for parliament­arians to condemn Islamophob­ia and for a study on systematic racism and religious discrimina­tion was about the study itself that began Monday.

“It uses the example of Islamophob­ia to make a larger point about the problem of all forms of systemic racism and religious discrimina­tion — that we have to find ways to tackle that broad problem in Canada as a whole,” Khalid said.

Khalid said she was motivated to introduce M-103 after hearing several stories of racist acts against different faiths in the fall of 2016. When she looked into the issue, she found the statistics to provide context to the problem were lacking and something had to be done.

“The objective of the motion was to bring forward this study, it is upon this committee as a whole to take that unified approach to study the issue, to work with each other to find those recommenda­tions to assist us as policy makers,” she said.

Khalid’s motion passed in a vote of 201-91 last spring. It called on MPs to recognize something had to be down to “quell the increasing public climate of hate and fear,” and to that end, the House ought to condemn Islamophob­ia and all forms of systemic racism and religious discrimina­tion and direct the heritage committee to study the issue, including how better to gather hate crime data.

The conflict around the motion centered largely around the word Islamophob­ia, setting off protests on Parliament Hill and arguments across the country over the meaning and implicatio­ns of the phrase.

Khalid told the committee she defines it as “irrational fear or hatred of Muslims or Islam” that leads to discrimina­tion.

But opponents say the word it is vague and essentiall­y means criticism against Islam of any kind is forbidden, and some saw Khalid’s motion as the first step in criminaliz­ing that criticism. Conservati­ve news outlet Rebel Media seized on that issue with gusto, forcing it into the Conservati­ve leadership race as contenders were grilled on their positions.

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