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#quebec mosque shooting
quasi-normalcy · 1 year
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agentfascinateur · 2 years
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Gone six years, but not forgotten
Ibrahima Barry, Mamadou Tanou Barry, Khaled Belkacemi, Abdelkrim Hassane, Azzedine Soufiane and Aboubaker Thabti.
🤲🏼
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beardedmrbean · 2 years
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Canada's first-ever anti-Islamophobia tsar is facing calls to resign after an op-ed resurfaced in which she called Quebecers Islamophobic.
Amira Elghawaby was appointed last week to the new position by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
In 2019, she co-wrote an opinion piece attacking a Quebec law that banned public servants from wearing religious symbols, including hijabs.
Last week, after her words resurfaced, she walked back her comments.
She said her article was meant to be a criticism of the law, not Quebecers themselves.
The op-ed, which she co-wrote in 2019 with a social activist for the Ottawa Citizen newspaper, read: "Unfortunately, the majority of Quebecers appear to be swayed not by the rule of law, but by anti-Muslim sentiment."
On Wednesday, amid mounting criticism, Ms Elghawaby apologised to Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet, who is the head of Quebec's federal separatist party.
"I am convinced, and I know and say it, that Quebecers are not racist," Ms Elghawaby said, according to the Montreal Gazette.
"It was not my intention, and because of the injuries caused by my words, I sincerely apologise."
But her apology did not immediately quell calls for her resignation.
On Thursday, Mr Blanchet said Ms Elghawaby was "hostile to the values ​​of Quebec" and urged Mr Trudeau to abolish the position entirely.
Mr Trudeau said he supports Ms Elghawaby "100%", while adding that he did not agree with her op-ed. "Quebecers are not racist," he said.
The prime minister has been a vocal critic of the bill, arguing it restricts people's freedom of expression and religion, but he has said the federal government will not intervene right now in the court process.
Bill 21, which came into law in Quebec in 2019, prevents judges, police officers, teachers and public servants from wearing symbols such as the kippah, turban or hijab while at work.
The law is currently being challenged in the courts.
Ms Elghawaby's appointment comes amid growing concern about Islamophobia in Canada as a whole.
In 2021, a man drove his vehicle into a Muslim family, killing four in the city of London, Ontario.
In 2017, six people were killed and eight injured in a shooting at a mosque in Quebec City.
Ms Elghawaby's appointment was heralded as a necessary step by the National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM).
Stephen Brown, head of the NCCM, said: "Islamophobia has been rising in recent years as mosques are consistently vandalised and Muslims are constantly harassed across the country. This cannot continue, enough is enough."
But the legislation remains popular in Quebec.
The province has a long and bitter history with the Catholic Church, which controlled many public institutions in the predominantly French-speaking Quebec for over a century.
Proponents of the bill have argued it is not anti-Muslim, but pro-secularism.
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newsfromstolenland · 2 years
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My mom told me there was a recent mass shooting in Ontario was there? What the in the flying fuck? The last one before that was in Nova Scotia if I am not mistaken by an unhinged doctor, then one time in Quebec in a mosque. What the fuck Canada?
Yes, a man in Vaughan shot and killed five people, then the shooter was shot and killed by a cop.
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college-girl199328 · 8 months
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When David Eby’s recent Holocaust Remembrance Day post on X went wrong, mistakenly stating, “We stand with the Muslim community throughout Canada on this sorrowful day,” the error was immediately pounced on by Andrew Reeve, press secretary for B.C. United leader, the writer of the post on X, with a scathing rebuke: “Glad to see this tweet was taken down, but who the hell drafted and approved this? Unacceptable.”
Who the hell? Well, probably someone just like Reeve—a communications staffer--is most likely not writing his own tweets. The error was serious but not fatal, in part because of the way it was handled.
Like it or not, social media has become the key component for government communications, from leadership campaigns to the highest office. Social media offers a direct avenue of communication between a politician, a government office, and the public. It’s a great tool, but not without pitfalls. Hard-copy news releases are a complete anachronism, and the days when government announcements were made in controlled environments such as a campaign bus or a carefully constructed news conference are long gone, said Geoff Meggs, who was chief of staff to former Premier John Horgan.
Managing a leader’s social media can lead to sleepless nights—think fires, floods, and pandemics expected--and they are expected to post on social media to show they are connected to issues in their local communities, including faith and cultural communities, and to respond to daily situations, such as emergencies and natural disasters.
They are consolers-in-chief, expected to respond to public pain, but they are also expected to have lighthearted moments, perhaps responding to the latest Canucks win. As said, social media is used as a straightforward communication tool to say what the government is doing.
Typically, a communications director will be one of the closest staff members to a leader, spending a lot of time with them so they can capture that person’s personality and be nearby to have them vet social media posts that either they or staff members write.
Planned social media posts that commemorate annual events, important cultural events, and religious holidays are typically carefully crafted in advance and not necessarily seen by the leader before they are posted—a possible reason the Jan. 27 Holocaust Remembrance Day post was mixed up with a planned Jan. 29 message commemorating the anniversary of the deadly shooting at a Quebec City mosque. Current events can easily go wrong, especially when the events are fraught. “From a communications perspective, the Palestinian-Israeli conflict has been a real challenge,” said Allam.
Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow got into hot water after she condemned Hamas in a tweet on Oct. 7, followed it with a tweet acknowledging Palestinian pain, then deleted both, then posted a revision, and later prompted an uproar by calling a local Palestinian protest “unsanctioned for the “messed up” messaging, blaming the limits of social media.
Allam said a good communications director will be methodical, thoughtful, calm, and committed to the values and views they and their clients represent. But there is one more thing: “You have to have nerves of steel,” said Allam.
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gulabilli · 8 months
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sometimes i still think about how my roommate 2 years ago asked me, “oh, are there even any mosques in quebec?”
like wtf?? i had to explain that yes, there are mosques in quebec, in fact there was even a shooting at one that made very big news only a few years earlier at that point
this same roommate that complained to a friend that poc are not oppressed anymore because of affirmative action (when she thought i wasn’t home and couldn’t hear)
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newstfionline · 2 years
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Wednesday, February 22, 2023
Democrats, Republicans and Canadians in standoff over migrant buses (Worldcrunch) In the last few years, thousands of migrants have been bussed to Democrat-run northern cities from the Republican-run states of Texas, Arizona and Florida. But the latest news is that migrants’ journeys don’t stop there—now being moved even further north, bounced around like balls in a game of political ping-pong. Authorities in New York City have begun shuttling them up to the Canadian border. And Quebec premier François Legault is demanding New York stop the buck-passing bus rides, which he says are straining the province’s asylum system. The news this week has added to pressure from Quebec for the Canadian national government to negotiate with the U.S. and close a legal loophole that allowed almost 40,000 people to cross into Canada last year via Roxham Road, a stretch of country road in upstate New York. Last year saw record traffic at the crossing, which spans the border between northern New York State and Quebec.
Three days. 10 mass shootings. More than 50 victims. (USA Today) Nine children were shot at Georgia gas station. Six people were killed in a Mississippi town. Eleven people were shot in Memphis. Five people were injured near a parade in New Orleans. Six people were shot on a Chicago expressway. That’s just half of the reported mass shooting violence over the weekend. There were 10 mass shootings from Feb. 17 through Feb. 19—the most of any weekend so far this year, according to data from the Gun Violence Archive. There have been 82 mass shootings this year, compared to 59 at the same time last year, according to data from the publicly sourced nonprofit database.
Americans applying for controversial ‘golden passports’ more than any other nationality, report says (The Week) A new report has determined that more wealthy Americans are looking to purchase a unique status symbol—not a yacht or a private plane, but citizenship abroad via a ‘golden passport.’ Also known as ‘citizenship by investment’ programs, golden passports “allow wealthy foreigners to receive citizenship in exchange for investing a certain amount of money in a country, often by purchasing real estate,” according to Insider. There are also ‘golden visas’ that provide temporary residence instead of permanent citizenship. According to a recent wealth report by research firm Henley & Partners, 2022 saw more Americans than ever apply for a ‘golden passport.’ The program had previously by dominated by the Chinese and the Russians, data shows, but a 447 percent jump in inquiries from 2019 has helped American nationals take the top spot.
Four-day week here to stay, say UK firms in world’s largest trial (Reuters) British companies trialling a four-day working week have mostly decided to stick with it after a six-month pilot in what campaigners for better work-life balance view as a breakthrough. Employees at 61 companies across Britain worked an average of 34 hours across four days between June and December 2022, while earning their existing salary. Of those, 56 companies, or 92%, opted to continue like that, 18 of them permanently. Most companies involved, across different sectors and sizes with 2,900 staff overall, said productivity was maintained. Staff said their well-being and work-life balance had improved while data showed employees were much less likely to quit their jobs as a result of the four-day week policy. The founder of a craft brewery involved in the trial said the trial encouraged greater productivity in shorter time. “We want to be more busy, less stressed,” the report quoted the founder as saying. For some employees surveyed, the extra day off was more important than any pay rise: 15% said no amount of money would induce them back to a five-day week.
Ruins of Turkish city of Antakya tell story of a rich past (AP) For nearly two weeks, Mehmet Ismet has lived in the ruins of Antakya’s most beloved historic mosque, a landmark in a now-devastated city that was famed for thousands of years as a meeting place of civilizations and revered by Christians, Muslims and Jews. The 74-year-old took refuge in the Habib Najjar mosque after a 7.8-magnitude earthquake killed tens of thousands in Turkey and Syria on Feb. 6. He has slept and prayed under the few arches still standing, mourning the future of a city renowned for its past. The destruction in Antakya was nearly total. Much of the city is rubble. What’s still standing is too unsafe to live in. Almost everyone has left. Antakya, known as Antioch in ancient times, has been repeatedly destroyed by earthquakes and rebuilt over history. But residents fear it will be a long time before it recovers from this one. Antioch, built in 300 B.C. by a general of Alexander the Great in the Orontes River valley, was one of the biggest cities of the Greco-Roman world, rivaling Alexandria and Constantinople. Saints Peter and Paul are said to have founded one of the oldest Christian communities here, and it’s here that the word “Christian” first came into use.
Russia’s war made Poland a key pit stop for Biden and other leaders (Washington Post) President Biden this week set out on his 10th foreign trip since taking office, making a surprise stop in Ukraine before a two-day visit to Poland. This will be a return visit to Warsaw for Biden—his second trip to Poland in just 11 months—while he has yet to pop up to Canada as president. The timing and staging of Biden’s visit on Tuesday and Wednesday highlight how a year of war has transformed Poland’s place in the world, recasting its relationship with the United States and its role in Europe. Before the war, Poland made headlines for its standoff with the European Union. Now, it is a go-to pit stop for foreign leaders and officials—not to mention weapons and ammunition—on route to Ukraine via train. Though Poland’s conflict with Europe is certainly still simmering, the country’s role as a bridge between Ukraine, Europe and the rest of the world has largely shifted the conversation—at least for now. “The last year has seen a tremendous change in the way Poland is viewed,” said Michal Baranowski, managing director of Warsaw-based GMF East, part of the German Marshall Fund. “In Europe, but especially in the transatlantic alliance.”
Putin accuses West of stoking global war to destroy Russia (Reuters) President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday vowed to continue with Russia’s year-long war in Ukraine and accused the U.S.-led NATO alliance of fanning the flames of the conflict in the mistaken belief that it could defeat Moscow in a global confrontation. Putin said Russia had done everything it could to avoid war, but that Western-backed Ukraine had been planning to attack Russian-controlled Crimea, annexed by Russia in 2014. The West, Putin said, had let the genie out of the bottle in a host of regions of across the world by sowing chaos and war. “The people of Ukraine have become the hostage of the Kyiv regime and its Western overlords, who have effectively occupied this country in the political, military and economic sense,” Putin said. “They intend to translate the local conflict into a global confrontation, we understand it this way and will react accordingly,” Putin said.
High February temperatures have India already bracing for more heat waves (Washington Post) Last year, Indian meteorologists sounded the first heat wave alert of the year in March, foreshadowing a summer that arrived unusually early—and brought some of the most extreme temperatures in India’s recorded history. This year, they are sounding the alarm even earlier. The India Meteorological Department issued the first heat wave alert of the year on Sunday, warning that parts of India’s western region would reach 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit (37C). Meanwhile, other parts of India are recording temperatures that are usually seen in mid-March and at least 40 degrees above normal. The abnormal temperatures are worrying experts who say India’s spring season—crucial for wheat production—is shrinking dangerously. The temperature increases in wheat-producing states are particularly concerning, given that last year’s heat brought wheat production down by roughly 10 percent, or almost 11 million metric tons. India, the world’s second-largest wheat producer, ended up banning exports of the grain furthering the global wheat supply crisis from the Ukraine-Russia war.
Rattled by China, U.S. and allies are beefing up defenses in the Pacific (Washington Post) The Chinese spy balloon spotted over sensitive nuclear sites in Montana and shot down by a U.S. fighter jet earlier this month jolted the nation. But for Adm. John Aquilino, commander of all U.S. military forces in the Indo-Pacific, it was only the latest in a string of provocations that includes missiles fired over Taiwan following a visit by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi last August, China’s rapidly growing nuclear arsenal and a pair of Chinese surveillance balloon sightings in the vicinity of the Hawaiian Islands last year. Add to that North Korea’s record number of missile launches last year, Beijing’s “no limits” relationship with Moscow, China’s unrelenting expansion of militarized air bases in the South China Sea, and “the current environment is probably the most dangerous I’ve seen in 30 years of doing this business,” Aquilino said in a recent interview in his hilltop office overlooking Pearl Harbor. The provocative actions taken by China, North Korea and Russia have prompted the United States and its closest allies in the Indo-Pacific to ramp up military capabilities and deepen their cooperation. “They’re bolstering their own defenses, they’re looking to strengthen their alliances and partnerships with the United States in particular, and they’re reaching out to each other,” said Ely Ratner, assistant secretary of defense for Indo-Pacific security affairs. “All of these things are happening at once.”
Taliban plans to turn former foreign bases into special economic zones (Reuters) The Taliban administration will move ahead with plans to turn former foreign military bases into special economic zones for businesses, the acting deputy prime minister for economic affairs said in a statement on Sunday. Afghanistan’s economy has struggled and aid agencies are warning of a severe humanitarian crisis since the Taliban took over in 2021 as foreign troops withdrew after 20 years of war. The takeover sparked a cut in development funding, the freezing of foreign-held central bank assets and sanctions enforced on the banking sector. The Taliban administration’s decision to bar most female NGO workers from work last year prompted many aid agencies to partially suspend operations while millions remain dependent on humanitarian aid. The Taliban have said they are focused on boosting economic self-sufficiency through trade and investment. Some foreign investors have expressed concerns over a series attacks, including at a hotel popular with Chinese businessmen, claimed by Islamic State.
Calls for change in Iran reach even Shiite heartland of Qom (AP) Iran’s city of Qom is one of the country’s most important centers for Shiite Muslim clerics, packed with religious schools and revered shrines. But even here, some are quietly calling for Iran’s ruling theocracy to change its ways after months of protests shaking the country. To be clear: Many here still support the cleric-led ruling system, which marked the 44th anniversary this month of Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution. This includes support for many of the restrictions that set off the protests, such as the mandatory hjjab, or headscarf, for women in public. But they say the government should change how it approaches demonstrators and women’s demands to be able to choose whether to wear an Islamic head covering or not. “The harsh crackdown was a mistake from the beginning,” said Abuzar Sahebnazaran, a cleric who described himself as an ardent backer of the theocracy, as he visited a former residence of the late revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. “And the youth should have been treated softly and politely. They should have been enlightened and guided.” Activists outside the country say at least 528 people have been killed and 19,600 people detained since the protests began. The Iranian government has not provided any figures.
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atlanticcanada · 2 years
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Crown acknowledges sentence of Moncton Mountie killer should be reduced
Crown prosecutors have formally acknowledged that the sentence for a New Brunswick man who fatally shot three Mounties must be amended so he can apply for parole after serving 25 years.
Justin Bourque was sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 75 years after he pleaded guilty to three counts of first-degree murder and two counts of attempted murder after targeting RCMP officers in Moncton, N.B., on the night of June 4, 2014.
Bourque's lawyer applied in December to the New Brunswick Court of Appeal to have the precedent-setting sentence reduced after the Supreme Court of Canada struck down the law that made it possible for judges to extend parole ineligibility periods beyond 25 years for people convicted of multiple murders.
The Supreme Court's decision involved the case of Alexandre Bissonnette, who murdered six men in a Quebec City mosque in 2017. He was originally sentenced to life with no chance of parole for 40 years, but the high court lowered the parole eligibility to 25 years.
A written submission from Crown attorney Patrick McGuinty on Jan. 20 to the Appeal Court said Bourque's sentence must be similarly amended.
"In particular, the Crown recognizes Bissonnette has binding and direct implications for Mr. Bourque's appeal," McGuinty said.
"In light of Bissonnette, the Crown acknowledges that Mr. Bourque's sentence appeal must be allowed, and his sentence be amended to a sentence of life imprisonment without eligibility to apply for parole for 25 years."
Bourque's case was on the Appeal Court docket Wednesday but no oral hearing was held and no decision released.
Angela Gevaudan, whose husband, Const. Fabrice Gevaudan, was among those killed in the shootings, said in a written victim impact statement that her physical and emotional health have suffered lasting damage.
She was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder within months of the shooting and has suffered physical illnesses ever since, including chronic inflammation in different parts of her body, she said.
In addition, she said, her difficulty sleeping has returned since the court decision last year that led to the potential earlier release of Bourque.
"I wake up in the middle of the night, unable to breathe," she said. She said she had hoped to make progress, but the potential of being notified of parole hearings for her husband's killer -- and the awareness he may now be released -- "made our worst nightmares a reality."
She said that while she doesn't believe in vengeance, she thought the original sentence made sense considering all the lives lost and altered. She noted her husband was 45 years old when he died, and that Bourque -- who was 24 at the time of the killings -- would not be much older when he can apply for parole if his sentence is reduced.
In a telephone interview Wednesday from her home in Ontario, Gevaudan said she believes Parliament needs to make legal changes that can withstand constitutional challenges to allow for longer sentences in cases of multiple murders.
"Now that we know so much more about trauma and its lasting impact on a victim of violence, I think our justice system isn't reflecting a balanced approach in dealing with violent crimes," she said.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 15, 2023.
-- With files from Michael Tutton in Halifax
from CTV News - Atlantic https://ift.tt/XF4ZMQA
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inkymp · 2 years
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The Supreme Court of Canada's decision that the Quebec City mosque shooter will be eligible for parole after 25 years — not the 40 years imposed by a judge or the 50 years the Crown had sought — has left victims and members of Quebec's Muslim community feeling crestfallen.
"I greeted this decision with disappointment," said Aymen Derbali, one of the survivors of the 2017 attack. He said other victims feel the same way.
Derbali was shot seven times and left paralyzed for life.
The father of three said he wasn't surprised by the ruling and had been mentally preparing himself for such an outcome.
Continue Reading.
Tagging: @politicsofcanada
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thebanalone · 4 years
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Hey guys, the terrorist who attacked a mosque in Quebec back in 2017 just got his sentence reduced. Help demand justice by singing this petition!
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therealstarfire · 8 years
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Donald Trump removed the KKK, Neo-Nazi and other white supremacist groups from the Terrorist Watchlist and will focus all his counter-terrorist on ones carried out by Muslims - two years after Dylan Roof killed 8 black churchgoers & right after the Quebec massacre where a white supremacist killed 8 Muslims at their mosque. I will never forgive or carry any sympathy for those who voted for him.
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if-you-fan-a-fire · 6 years
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“A few weeks ago, seven teenagers were taken into police custody after a lockdown at a high school in Milton, Ontario. One was released, and six others were arrested. No one was injured but a knife was recovered, as well as two weapons believed to be firearms.
This incident was reported by a few media outlets in Ontario. It isn't clear whether the teens were charged or not. A simple search on the internet brings up dozens, if not more, of such incidents happening across Canada. Bombs threats, posession of weapons, and threats of violence, all the work of Canadian teenagers and all happening right here in Canada, probably near one of your neighbourhood high schools.
Despite the gravity of the acts, there were no RCMP press conferences, no terrorism charges laid against these teenagers, no security experts invited by the national media to analyze the phenomenon, and no politicians asking for an overhaul of the refugee screening program. The language spoken by these young perpetrators didn't interest any commentators. And Opposition leader Andrew Scheer hasn't asked any questions about the incident in Milton, and didn't call for a tightening of firearms legislation, even knowing that his predecessor Stephen Harper dismantled the federal long-gun registry in 2012. No special aircraft was used for surveillance of these neighbourhoods and no FBI tips to the RCMP about any of these incidents were shared. Nothing like this happened. Basically, no one cares.
But when the protagonist of similar acts is a teenage boy, most likely of Muslim background, and came to Canada as a Syrian refugee, it is a whole different story. The RCMP is involved, the FBI -- previously implicated in an operation that led to the killing of Aaron Driver, a young Muslim-Canadian who was a supporter of ISIS, in obscure circumstances -- are now in the loop. A Pilatus PC-12 RCMP aircraft was surveying the teen's Kingston neighbourhood for days before his arrest. A press conference was held by no less than the Integrated National Security Enforcement Team of the RCMP. Even financial monitoring agency FINTRAC, which has so far been inefficient in stopping major money launderingand gave anonymity to a Canadian bank found guilty of not respecting the rules, joined the efforts. And of course, Scheer was so worried that he asked for a re-examination of the screening process for refugees coming to Canada.
From this Kingston arrest, we learned that explosives were found in the teen's house and that initially two young people were arrested. One young man was later released and not charged, even though he had been named by the media. The other person turned out to be a teenager and was subsequently charged.
According to the RCMP, explosives were found in the house; however, by his own admission, the RCMP superintendent told the media that "there was no specific target identified." Nevertheless he was adamant in saying that "there was an attack planned." Despite all these confusing statements, the teen was charged with "knowingly facilitating a terrorist activity," and "counselling a person to deliver, place, discharge or detonate an explosive or other lethal device in a public place."
This week, I was at a vigil on Parliament Hill to commemorate the killing of six Muslim men by a young Canadian man, Alexandre Bissonnette. Despite the planning of his heinous crime, and his clear intent to spread fear and terrorize Muslims in a place of worship, Bissonnette was never charged with terrorism. He was described as a bullied and troubled teenager, and as a "lone wolf," but never as a terrorist.
The Crown psychiatrist for his case said Bissonnette "didn't promote any type of ideology in carrying out actions" (understanding ideology as Islam).
In opposition, the recently arrested Kingston teenager, even though he was not charged with belonging to a terrorist group and thus would have been a good candidate for the qualification of "lone wolf," was still charged with terrorism.
Today, I have not a single doubt in my mind that this teen is Muslim. Today, I have the deep conviction that terrorism legislation in Canada is made to indict Muslims and Muslims only.
During that vigil, there were Liberal politicians present. They all condemned Islamophobia and hate. And that is commendable.
Looking at the centennial flame, and thinking of the widows and orphans and victims with life-long injuries left behind by the actions of Bissonnette, I wondered in silence if any of those politicians ever thought that the same legislation their own party voted for is responsible for stirring the pot of Islamophobia.
When Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale candidly "urges people not to jump to conclusions based on early reports" and accuses Scheer of "talking as if he knows the outcome of a police investigation," doesn't he realize that these same mediatized arrests by his own law enforcement agencies, and their problematic collaboration with the FBI (found guilty of entrapment many times) are responsible for this climate of fear and the "jumping to conclusion" attitudes that he is denouncing? Couldn't the case of the Kingston teen have been dealt with differently? He could have been charged on the basis of the Criminal Code, like in the other teenagers' arrests across the country -- teenagers, frequently found with weapons and firearms, and who no politicians, no security experts, no RCMP, no FBI, no national TV, are there to talk about and care about.” - Monia Mazigh, “Kingston arrest shows terrorism charges are exclusively for Muslims.” Rabble.ca. February 1, 2019.
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doctortwhohiddles · 4 years
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Raise your hand if you think Richard I'm-a-Nazi Spencer endorsed Biden only to create problem for him?
By the way, the Biden campaing rejected the endorsement pretty quickly, like within an hour. How long did it take Trump to reject David Duke's endorsement again?
Here's the rebuke from Biden campaing manager: "When Joe Biden says we are in a battle for the soul of our nation against vile forces of hate who have come crawling out from under rocks, you are the epitome of what he means. What you stand for is absolutely repugnant. Your support is 10,000% percent unwelcome here."
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wethemuslims · 8 years
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Saeed Al Amani is one of the victims of the Quebec City masjid shootings. He was shot multiple times in the abdomen, puncturing his intestines, and leg. A father of 4 young children, ages 15, 13, 10 and 7. His family is requesting you all make a dua (prayer to God)for his full and complete recovery inshallah.
Source: Afia Baig FB
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college-girl199328 · 2 years
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New Brunswick man who killed three Mounties in 2014 files appeal of a stiff sentence
A New Brunswick man who fatally shot three Mounties eight years ago has applied to the province's highest court. In 2014, Justin Bourque was sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 75 years, which was the harshest penalty imposed by a Canadian court since 1962 -- the last time state-sanctioned executions were carried out.
In a notice of appeal filed last month, Bourque's lawyer cites the Supreme Court of Canada's decision in May to strike down a 2011 law that made it possible for judges to extend parole ineligibility periods beyond 25 years for people convicted of multiple murders.
In its decision last year, the Supreme Court said the Criminal Code provision violated the Charter of Rights and Freedoms because it amounted to a cruel and unusual punishment for offenders who faced no realistic possibility of parole before they died. The top court also declared the law was invalid retroactive to when it was enacted.
Bourque's lawyer, David Lutz, confirmed Thursday that the New Brunswick Court of Appeal will deal with the matter on Feb. 15, but he said there will be no oral hearing at that time. He declined to comment when asked if the proceeding be just a formality, given the Supreme Court of Canada's earlier decision.
That unanimous ruling was in response to an appeal filed by Alexandre Bissonnette, who was sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 40 years after he pleaded guilty to fatally shooting six people at a Quebec City mosque in 2017.
A judge found the parole ineligibility provision unconstitutional but did not declare it invalid. Quebec's Court of Appeal subsequently ruled the provision invalid on constitutional grounds. And it said the court must revert to the law as it stood before 2011, meaning parole ineligibility periods are to be served concurrently instead of consecutively, resulting in a total waiting period of 25 years in Bissonnette's case.
Bourque pleaded guilty to three counts of first-degree murder and two counts of attempted murder after targeting RCMP officers on June 4, 2014.
An agreed statement of facts said Bourque's actions in Moncton, N.B., were "planned and deliberate" when he used a semi-automatic rifle to kill constables Dave Ross, 32; Fabrice Gevaudan, 45; and Douglas Larche, 40. Constables Eric Dubois and Darlene Goguen were injured in the shootings.
At his sentencing hearing, the court watched a videotaped statement from Bourque, who said he had wanted to encourage people to rise up against the "soldiers" that defend federal institutions and protect the rich from the poor. He mused about his strict Catholic upbringing, climate change, evolution, social engineering, class warfare, tyrants, and threats posed by the Russians and the Chinese.
He has automatically been sentenced to life in prison -- a minimum 25-year term. As well, the judge decided that under the 2011 law, the 25-year parole ineligibility period required for each first-degree murder conviction would be applied consecutively, meaning Bourque would have to wait 75 years before he could apply for parole.
With the anticipated reduction in that sentence next month, Bourque -- who was 24 at the time of the murders -- should be able to apply for parole when he is 49 instead of 99.
In its decision, the Supreme Court of Canada said the Charter requires Parliament to leave a door open for rehabilitation. Chief Justice Richard Wagner, writing on behalf of the high court, said the 2011 law authorized the courts to impose "a sentence so absurd that it would bring the administration of justice into disrepute."
The 2011 legislation was the Protecting Canadians by Ending Sentence Discounts for Multiple Murders Act. It was introduced by the Conservative government led by Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
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