Toronto Star

Ottawa cancels public ceremony for Israeli flag-raising

Event delayed over security concerns

- SIMON HOPKINS

City officials say they’ve cancelled plans to host a flag-raising ceremony at Ottawa City Hall marking the establishm­ent of Israel because of security concerns.

The Israeli flag will be raised next Tuesday to mark Yom Ha’atzmaut, but a ceremony involving the mayor, diplomats and members of the Jewish community will not go ahead.

The city said it has intelligen­ce that suggests the event would pose “a substantia­l risk to public safety.” It did not offer details about the nature of that concern.

“The city must prioritize the safety of its residents, visitors and employees. Therefore, this year’s commemorat­ion will occur without the customary ceremony,” the city said in a news release Tuesday.

Ottawa police did not answer questions about the security concerns or its recommenda­tion to cancel the event, saying in an email that its safety plans “are scalable and adaptable to current needs.”

Social-media posts suggest the event would have attracted protesters, including from the student-led pro-Palestinia­n encampment at the University of Ottawa.

The group Ottawa 4 Palestine shared on social media last week that it planned to “shut down the Zionist flag-raising event.”

Mayor Mark Sutcliffe said he’s disappoint­ed at the decision, blaming “escalating threats and hostility” in a social-media post.

“The Jewish community is a vital and important part of our city. Members of Ottawa’s Jewish community have faced a significan­t increase in antisemiti­sm, threats, and hostility in the past seven months,” Sutcliffe said.

Deborah Lyons, Canada’s envoy for combating antisemiti­sm, condemned the decision to cancel the event. “Limiting Jewish participat­ion in Canadian life due to the threat of violence is not acceptable,” she wrote on social media.

“Add security, take precaution­s. Do not simply cancel the event. I ask Ottawa to reconsider,” Liberal MP Anthony Housefathe­r wrote on X.

The city pointed out in its news release that it celebrates national holidays and independen­ce days with flag-raising events and activities for more than 190 countries.

Leilani Farha, a human-rights lawyer and housing activist, said in a social-media post that she had asked the mayor to cancel the event because the event would be “completely inappropri­ate and deeply hurtful” in light of the ongoing war in the Gaza Strip.

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