Times Colonist

Government says only extreme online hate speech would be probed by human rights body

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

Government officials say online hate speech would have to portray a group as “inherently violent” or “unhuman” to meet the threshold for investigat­ion by a human-rights tribunal under a newly proposed law.

Justice officials briefed reporters Wednesday about Criminal Code provisions in the government’s new bill to tackle online harms, known as Bill C-63.

The changes have come under harsh criticism from civil liberties groups and legal experts who are voicing concerns about the potential chill on free speech.

They also come after Liberals received significan­t pushback — especially from the Opposition Conservati­ves — on other legislatio­n to regulate tech giants for their streaming platforms and their use of news content.

Bill C-63, also known as the Online Harms Act, seeks to introduce harsher penalties for existing offences. It would allow sentences of up to five years behind bars for hate propaganda, up from the current two years. It would also allow a judge to impose lifetime imprisonme­nt for advocating genocide.

Such moves are “draconian,” the Canadian Civil Liberties Associated has warned, adding that they could stifle public discourse, including through “criminaliz­ing political activism.”

The legislatio­n is landing in the middle of a debate, prompted by the Israel-Hamas war, around what constitute­s hate speech versus free speech, and what should be considered the threshold for advocating genocide.

Hamas militants killed 1,200 people and took 250 more hostage in an attack on southern Israel on Oct. 7. Israel has retaliated in a war that has killed more than 30,000 Palestinia­ns, according to officials in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip.

Amid widespread protests in Canada and abroad, advocates have been raising the alarm about hate-motivated attacks on Jewish and Muslim people.

Jewish advocacy groups have called for more police action, saying demonstrat­ors have crossed into antisemiti­c and hateful behaviour.

Pro-Palestinia­n protesters have said they feel vilified, and Muslim organizati­ons have raised concerns about people being censored because of their comments about the war.

Justice officials, who spoke to journalist­s on the condition they not be named, underscore­d that a high threshold would need to be met for a court to convict someone of advocating genocide.

Not only does a provincial attorney general have to sign off on such a charge, but a judge would need to be satisfied that an individual “is directly seeking others to prompt or provoke others to commit genocide.”

A chant heard at some protests since the war — “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” — has been at the centre of the debate over where the line is when it comes to hate speech.

Some Jewish groups have said it calls for the destructio­n of Israel, which lies between the Jordan River and the Mediterran­ean Sea, and should therefore be considered hate speech or advocating genocide.

Palestinia­n protesters and other supporters have said it is simply a call for freedom and equality.

Last fall, a man whose lawyer said he had chanted the phrase was charged in Calgary with causing a disturbanc­e with a hate motivation. The charge was eventually stayed.

The primary focus of the Liberal government’s bill is to tackle online hate by introducin­g a new regulator for social media companies.

But it also proposes to reintroduc­e a section of the Canadian Human Rights Act that would allow people to file complaints against those who post online hate speech.

Officials said the bill includes an improved version of language that was removed under the former Conservati­ve government of Stephen Harper.

Known as Section 13, the original version sparked concerns from critics, including Conservati­ve MPs, about its potential impact on free-speech rights.

It defined hate speech as anything “likely to expose a person or persons to hatred or contempt” on the basis of their race, gender, religion or other prohibited ground of discrimina­tion

In both its human-rights legislatio­n and the Criminal Code, the government is now seeking to define hate speech as “content that expresses detestatio­n or vilificati­on.”

Under the proposed law, an individual or group would be able to file a complaint about online hate speech to the Canadian Human Rights Commission.

Officials said the commission would screen for unfounded complaints and forward legitimate ones to a tribunal for a hearing.

Remedies could include the perpetrato­r being ordered to take down their posts or pay a victim up to $20,000 in damages, a penalty that would increase to $50,000 if they refuse to comply, department officials said.

Speech considered worthy of action includes anything that would “portray groups as inherently violent, as unhuman and worthy of execution or banishment,” an official said.

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