Vancouver Sun

Anti-immigratio­n groups appear to celebrate U.S. violence online

- NICK EAGLAND neagland@postmedia.com twitter.com/nickeaglan­d

A group linked to an anti-immigratio­n rally set for Saturday in Vancouver is using social media to celebrate the death of a woman killed by a white supremacis­t at a rally last weekend in Charlottes­ville, Va.

The upcoming rally outside Vancouver City Hall is organized by the Worldwide Coalition Against Islam’s Canadian chapter (WCAI Canada), as well as the Cultural Action Party of Canada (CAP), according to an event Facebook page.

Saturday, after protester Heather Heyer was killed by a car allegedly driven by James Alex Fields Jr. at the “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottes­ville, one of the Vancouver rally’s organizers — a man using the name Chadd Beneteau on Facebook — shared a meme on his personal page with the message “GOOD NIGHT LEFT SIDE” that depicts the same make and model of car that killed Heyer and injured other protesters.

The group behind that meme, WCAI USA, also posted a video clip to its Facebook page of the car striking protesters with the comment: “Finally Antifa got what they deserved. For too long they have been going to patriot rallies and pestering people causing violence when people just want a peaceful protest.”

WCAI USA claimed it does “not condone violence like this, but we can understand why it has come to this.”

CAP founder Brad Salzberg said that while he plans to speak at Saturday’s event, he isn’t aware of and doesn’t share all of the views of the WCAI groups.

“I can’t really speak for them,” he said. “They’re putting on the rally, I’m scheduled as a speaker.”

Salzberg added that it would be wrong to imply that he is “completely on board” with whatever WCAI has to say at the event.

He admonished the violence that occurred in Charlottes­ville and said his focus for Saturday’s rally will be Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s agenda related to multicultu­ralism.

Salzberg said he doesn’t “believe in racial supremacy of any form” and said his group wants to represent people who want to “promote and maintain the European and Canadian identity of Canada,” but not necessaril­y dominate in any way.

Just 18 people had indicated they were “Going ” to the Vancouver rally on the event’s Facebook page by deadline. Far-right group Soldiers of Odin is also expected to attend.

“What’s disturbing now is to see this constellat­ion coming together,” said Barbara Perry, an expert on hate crime at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology. “I think that’s where the danger lies, when they begin to reinforce one another and sort of pump one another up.”

Perry said some groups seem to aspire to CAP’s status as a registered political party and said she would expect CAP to distance itself from those who are outwardly condoning violence. But while groups may not “want to get their hands dirty, you can’t dissociate yourself from the messaging ” of the “shock troops” such as the neo-Nazis and skinheads who bring weapons to U.S. rallies, she said.

Lisa Descary, who is helping organize the Oppose the Racists in Metro Vancouver counter protest Saturday, said she believes the threat of danger will be mitigated by the thousands of people she expects to join her group.

“But we are taking precaution­s, obviously,” she said.

Descary said the group is working with people who have done security work in previous marches and protests, as well as experts in de-escalation and safety.

Counter protesters will be discourage­d from getting too close to the protesters or reacting to any attempt by protesters to bait them into violence, Descary said.

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