Medicine Hat News

New cabinet minister Omar Alghabra slams ‘harmful innuendo’ by Bloc about his past

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Transport Minister Omar Alghabra says he feels let down by Bloc Quebecois efforts to taint his past with “dangerous and harmful innuendo.”

“I am disappoint­ed by the

Bloc Quebecois’ attempts to create divisions for mere political gain,” he said Wednesday in a statement to The Canadian Press.

“I expected better ... We know what such misinforma­tion could lead to,” he said, calling on the Bloc to reconsider its insinuatio­ns, which he dubbed a “dangerous game.”

Alghabra, who received his first ministeria­l post as part of a cabinet shuffle Tuesday, was reacting to a Bloc release that sought to sow doubt about his associatio­n with what it called “the political Islamic movement.”

Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet said Wednesday that “questions arise” due to the minister’s former role as head of the Canadian Arab Federation.

However, Blanchet said he “refuses to accuse” the minister of anything specific.

Alghabra was the federation’s president before being elected as a Liberal MP in 2006.

Rather than make specific accusation­s, the Bloc pointed to a 2016 article by a right-wing Quebec newspaper columnist that made implicatio­ns about Alghabra’s personal and profession­al history.

“It’s really questions about his past ... and also the separation of church and state, which is a profound value for the Bloc,” said spokesman Julien CoulombeBo­nnafous.

“We don’t want to raise any accusation­s, because I don’t think there’s that much.”

In 2009, then-citizenshi­p and immigratio­n minister Jason Kenney opted to cut funding for the Canadian Arab Federation, whose leader at the time made statements that Kenney called anti-Semitic and supportive of terrorist groups.

The Bloc’s attempt to undermine confidence in Alghabra follows his move to distance himself from a YouTuber who has expressed intolerant views toward LGBTQ communitie­s.

Alghabra said in a statement Tuesday night he is a longtime advocate for LGBTQ rights and was “shocked and disappoint­ed” to learn of a video using homophobic slurs that was posted online by Fadi Younes, whose digital marketing agency Alghabra had hired on a contract that has since been terminated.

“I was not aware of these comments before today and I wholly reject them,” said the MP for Mississaug­a Centre.

“We must combat ignorance, hate or intoleranc­e in our society. I will continue to support LGBTQ rights, as we continue to build a more inclusive and tolerant society for everyone.”

In 2018, Conservati­ve Sen. Denise Batters apologized to Alghabra, who was born in Saudi Arabia, after she wondered aloud why the then-parliament­ary secretary for the foreign affairs minister wasn’t questioned about his place of birth while speaking with media about Canada’s diplomatic dispute with the country at the time.

 ?? CP PHOTO ADRIAN WYLD ?? Transport Minister Omar Alghabra attends a news conference Wednesday in Ottawa.
CP PHOTO ADRIAN WYLD Transport Minister Omar Alghabra attends a news conference Wednesday in Ottawa.

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