Medicine Hat News

Race relations foundation urges more help for victims as hate crimes rise further

- MARIE WOOLF

OTTAWA

The head of the Canadian Race Relations Foundation is calling for action to combat hate and more federal help for victims, as new statistics show that hate crimes in Canada rose by 27 per cent last year.

Executive director

Mohammed Hashim warned that unless action is taken to combat hate-motivated abuse, including online, it will continue to spread.

He said the “slew of hate” online is so prevalent it risks becoming normalized and those affected are changing their behaviour to deal with it, including by not reading social media comments.

“It is a firehose of hate that is growing, honestly, like a wildfire,” he said. “And unmitigate­d it will grow even further to a point where we will normalize being in a wildfire.

“That is because we have left this environmen­t unchecked.”

Statistics Canada reported a dramatic increase in hate crimes in 2021. Last year, the number of hate-motivated crimes reported to the police rose to 3,360 incidents from 2,646 in 2020. This followed a 36 per cent rise in 2020.

In total, the number of hatemotiva­ted crimes recorded by the police has gone up 72 per cent since 2019, according to the agency.

Four Muslim Canadians from the same family were killed in June last year when a man rammed a truck into them in London, Ont. Police have said the attack was motivated by Islamophob­ia.

Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said the figures are “further evidence of the alarming and unacceptab­le rise of hate that marginaliz­ed communitie­s have experience­d in recent years.”

Mendicino said the federal government is taking action on a variety of fronts, led by new legislatio­n to tackle the rise of hate speech and hate crimes.

“We will not rest until all Canadians feel safe in their communitie­s,” he added.

A report by the race relations foundation, published Tuesday, calls for greater federal help for victims of hate, many of whom do not qualify for financial compensati­on because their abuse does not count as a crime.

Hashim warned that “not supporting victims and leaving hate to proliferat­e freely disintegra­tes Canadian multicultu­ralism as a whole and a sense of collective belonging to this nation.”

Hate-motivated crimes targeting a person’s religious affiliatio­n were up 67 per cent last year, according to Statistics Canada. Crimes based on a victim’s sexual orientatio­n were up 64 per cent year over year. Another 1,723 recorded incidents targeted a person’s race or ethnicity, a six per cent increase, and together these categories made up the majority of the overall rise.

Marvin Rotrand of B’nai Brith Canada said Jews were the No. 1 target of hate crimes aimed at religious minorities.

“All Canadians should be worried about the alarming explosion of hate crimes witnessed in 2021,” Rotrand said. “Our community comprises

1.25 per cent of the Canadian population but were the victims of 56 per cent of hate crimes aimed at religious minorities. That is more than all other religious groups combined.”

Shimon Koffler Fogel, president and CEO of the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, said incidents targeting the Jewish community have risen by 47 per cent since 2020.

“Statistica­lly, Canadian Jews were more than 10 times more likely than any other Canadian religious minority to report being the target of a hate crime,” he said.

All provinces and territorie­s reported increases in the number of hate crimes in 2021, except for Yukon, where the numbers remained the same.

Amita Kuttner, the interim leader of the Green party who is trans and non-binary, said hatemotiva­ted crimes tend to increase in times of crisis.

“The trans community certainly has noticed a rise in hate, and emboldened violence ... (That is) part of why we called for a specific anti-trans hate strategy back in May,” they said. “This is certainly not limited to any one community though.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada