Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Canada holds Islamophob­ia summit

-

MORE work must be done to reduce hate crimes and violence that have sometimes ended in the murder of Muslims in Canada, a summit convened by the federal government concluded Thursday.

The summit was called following numerous violent incidents against Muslims. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said at the event that Canadians must strive for a country “where we celebrate diversity, where we stand together.”

“That’s the promise our country must work hard to live up to because too many times and for too many people that promise has been broken,” he stated.

An attack in June saw a suspect in a pickup truck deliberate­ly run down five members of a Muslim family in London, Ontario, killing four and leaving a 9-year-old boy an orphan. It was a real blow to the Muslim community and shocked Canadians across the country. It spurred the federal government to take emergency action and call the summit. The National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM) said Canada has a history of blatant hate attacks against Muslims. “The reality is that Canada has suffered more mass killings motivated by Islamophob­ia in the last five years than any other country in the G-7,” Mustafa Farooq, head of the NCCM, said at a press conference a few days before the summit.

Canadian Muslims were doubtful but had their fingers crossed that change would come out of the summit. “The proof will be in the pudding if they are actually going to put some meaningful considerat­ion and effort behind making recommenda­tions actionable,” Jasmin Zine, a professor of sociology at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, Ontario, told CTVNews.ca in an interview.

Following the London killings, the NCCM and the London Mosque drew up a list of 61 recommenda­tions that, if followed, could defuse some of the hate, officials said. Among them are criminal code changes to put emphasis on assaults spurred by hate, the establishm­ent of a national fund for Islamophob­ia victims, more focus on dealing with white supremacis­t groups and inspection­s to see if such groups have succeeded in placing their members in national security organizati­ons.

The suggestion­s also included the formation of an anti-Islamophob­ia plan of action before the end of the year, dealing with Islamophob­ia in classrooms, municipal bylaws to deal with harassment at the local grassroots level and anti-racism campaigns in schools.

The London attack, while horrific, is one in a long line of attacks against Muslims.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye