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Canada: Islamic Congress Sues Maclean's Magazine
Opinion
Barry Artsite, Now Public Contributor
Ah, Human Rights, the bastion of what makes Canada attractive to many wishing to flee their war torn countries for the safe haven of our shores. These same Human Rights, lacking in predominately Islamic Countries, but used repeatedly
by Mohamed Elmasry, President of Canada's Islamic Congress who is suing Maclean's Magazine for being Islamophobic. You just know Moderate Muslims everywhere are shaking their heads and hoping this Zealot would just go away.
Censorship In The Name Of 'Human Rights'Canada's human rights tribunals, once tools for fighting racism and discrimination, have been transformed into a politically correct shakedown racket
Ezra Levant, National Post Published: Tuesday, December 18, 2007
The Canadian Islamic Congress (CIC) is taking Maclean's magazine to a human rights commission. Its crime? Refusing the CIC's absurd demand that Maclean's print a five-page letter to the editor in response to an article the CIC didn't like.
It may shock those who do not follow human rights law in Canada, but Maclean's will probably lose.
Forcing editors to publish rambling letters is not a human right in Canada. But that's not how the CIC worded their complaint, filed with the B.C., Ontario and federal human rights commissions. Maclean's is "flagrantly Islamophobic" and "subjects Canadian Muslims to hatred and contempt" according to a CIC statement. "I felt personally victimized," said Khurrum Awan at the CIC's recent press conference. All this because Maclean's dared to run a column discussing the demographic rise of Islam in the West.
It's a new strategy for the CIC, which in the past has tried unsuccessfully to sue news media it disagreed with -- including the National Post -- using Canada's defamation laws. But Canada's civil courts aren't the best tool for that sort of bullying. In a defamation lawsuit, the CIC would have to hire its own lawyers, follow the rules of court and prove that it suffered real damages -- and the newspapers would have truth and fair comment as defences. Launching a nuisance suit against Maclean's would result in an embarrassing loss for the CIC, a court order to pay the magazine's legal fees and it would deepen the CIC's reputation as a group of radicals who don't understand Canadian values. (Three years ago, Mohamed Elmasry, the CIC's Egyptian-born president, declared that every adult Jew in Israel is a legitimate target for terrorists).
So civil lawsuits won't work. Criminal charges are a non-starter, too: Canada's hate-speech laws are reserved for extreme acts of incitement, and charges can only be laid with the approval of the justice minister. And in criminal court, the accused must be proved guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. No chance there.
That's why human rights commissions are the perfect instrument for the CIC. The CIC doesn't even have to hire a lawyer: Once the complaint has been accepted by the commissions, taxpayers' dollars and government lawyers are used to pursue the matter. Maclean's, on the other hand, will have to hire its own lawyers with its own money. Rules of court don't apply. Normal rules of evidence don't apply. The commissions are not neutral; they're filled with activists, many of whom aren't even lawyers and do not understand the free-speech safeguards contained in our constitution.
And the punishments that these commissions can order are bizarre. Besides fines to the government and payments to complainants, defendants can be forced to "apologize" for having unacceptable political or religious opinions.
An apology might not sound onerous, yet it is far more troubling than a fine. Ordering a person -- or a magazine -- to say or publish words that they don't believe is an Orwellian act of thought control. The editor of Maclean's, Ken Whyte, maintains his magazine is fair. But human rights commissions have the power to order him to publish a confession that he's a bigot -- or, as in one Ontario case, even order someone to study Islam. Even convicted murderers cannot be "ordered" to apologize.
Human rights commissions are a relatively new creation, formed in the 1960s and 1970s for political reasons, not legal reasons. The main issues that these commissions were created to address -- such as racial discrimination in rental housing and employment -- were already covered by established landlord and tenant law, as well as labour and employment law. The commissions were supposed to be an informal, sympathetic forum for vulnerable people who needed extra help; and commissions were limited to dispensing a few thousand dollars. It was like small claims court for minorities; a shield to help them against the sword of discrimination.Few human rights complaints still fall into those categories. A quick canvass of Alberta's cases over the past few years, for example, reveals not a single complaint from someone denied rental housing based on race. The most common cases seem to be employees quitting over squabbles with other staff -- a female backhoe operator claimed her rights as a woman were violated for being called "honey" and other locker-room talk on a construction site; a male hair stylist claimed his rights were violated because the girls at salon school called him a "loser." Another common complaint is sick or injured people being dismissed for not being able to do their jobs anymore, claiming that they have a "human right" not to be fired. In 2004, Albert's Family Restaurant in Red Deer was ordered to pay $4,900 to a kitchen manager who was fired because she had contagious Hepatitis C-- illegal discrimination based on disability, said the commission.
Most cases are not about real rights, and the rulings are wildly inconsistent. The commissions have become a whimsical tax-man, where businesses are charged a few thousand dollars for making the mistake of hiring thin-skinned employees. For most companies, it's not even worth paying a lawyer to contest the complaint, other than on principle.
But besides sorting out office politics, some of Canada's human rights codes cover "publications." Those powers were originally meant to cover things like signs saying No Jews Allowed or Whites Only (in human rights jargon, symbols that "indicate discrimination") or a swastika or burning KKK cross planted on someone's yard.
You don't need to be a lawyer to know that a magazine article is not what the founders of human rights commissions had in mind. As Alan Borovoy, the general counsel of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association -- and one of the architects of modern Canadian human rights law -- wrote last year, "during the years when my colleagues and I were labouring to create such commissions, we never imagined that they might ultimately be used against freedom of speech." Censoring debates was "hardly the role we had envisioned for human rights commissions."
Borovoy's warning has gone unheeded. The opposite, actually -- it signalled to the CICs of the world that human rights commissions are the perfect instrument to pursue their agenda of censorship. At the federal Canadian Human Rights Commission, for example, one single activist -- a lawyer named Richard Warman, who used to work at the commission himself -- has filed 26 complaints, nearly 50% of all complaints under that commission's "hate messages" section. He's turned it into a part-time job, winning tens of thousands of dollars in "awards" from people he's complained about in the past few years. Warman is a liberal activist, who likes to complain against Web sites he calls racist or homophobic. He's had the common sense to stick to suing small, oddball bloggers who can't fight back. But surely the CIC has observed Warman's winning streak, and will use his precedents to go after Maclean's.An even more terrifying precedent recently was set in Alberta. The case involved a letter to the editor written by a Christian pastor and published in the Red Deer Advocate newspaper. The letter was a zealous, even rude, expression of the pastor's belief that homosexuality was a sin, and that there was a homosexual political "agenda" that had to be stopped. But instead of joining the debate by writing a letter to the editor, a local teacher complained to the human rights commission.
The commission's one-woman panel--a divorce lawyer with no expertise in constitutional rights -- ruled that "the publication's exposure of homosexuals to hatred and contempt trumps the freedom of speech afforded in the Charter." That was it: Freedom of speech, and of the press, and religion, all of which are called "fundamental freedoms" in our Constitution, now come second to the newly discovered right of a thin-skinned bystander not to be offended.
In a rare move, the Alberta government sent a lawyer to intervene in the case -- against the pastor. The government lawyer argued that "if people were allowed to simply hide behind the rubric of political and religious opinion, they would defeat the entire purpose of the human rights legislation." Borovoy's well-intentioned laws aren't about making sure aboriginals can get taxi rides anymore.
The human rights panellist in question -- Lori Andreachuk, a former Tory riding association president -- wholeheartedly embraces this expansion of the definiton of "human rights." "It is, in my view, nonsensical to enact human rights legislation, to protect the dignity and human rights of Albertans, only to have it overridden by the expression of opinion in all forms," she wrote. Though no harm was proved to have come from the pastor's letter, it "was likely to expose gay persons to more hatred in the community" -- precisely the same language used by the CIC in their complaint against Maclean's.
In a ruling that spanned some 80 pages, Andreachuk spared just two paragraphs to explain why she was overruling the Charter's guarantee of freedom of speech. In real courts, a demanding legal hurdle called the Oakes Test must be passed before that can be done. The reason for infringing a Charter right must be "pressing and substantial," the infringement couldn't be "arbitrary or irrational" and it must be as "minimal" as possible. None of that analysis was even attempted by Andreachuk -- that's boring legal stuff for real judges in real courts. The Oakes Test was named after David Oakes, a man charged with trafficking of hash oil, who beat the rap using the Charter. Accused drug dealers get the benefit of the Constitution, but not accused pastors.
There will be more human rights complaints like the CIC's, and more staggering rulings like the Alberta decision. It's odd: Mohamed Elmasry, an apologist for Islamo-fascism, using the same tools as an "anti-racist" leftist like Richard Warman. At first glance, they may seem like opposites, but they're actually identical: Both are illiberal censors who have found a quirk in our legal system, and are using it to undermine our Western traditions of freedom. Until last week, I would have thought that Maclean's magazine was too big a fish for them to swallow. I don't think that anymore.
ezra@westernstandard.ca
Now Public Readers should know Mohamed Elmasry, who I have reported on many times in Now Public famous for his rants on talk shows and in the media whereby Mr. Elmasry and other Imams who follow idealology proclaim: Uncovered women (sans Hijab) are just pieces of meat, deserving of rape, defiled or killed. Women who have an extramarital affair should be executed. His inflammatory statements outraged women the world over. Canada under the Liberal Government Leadership of Prime Minister Paul Martin did nothing, no deportation, no Hate Crime lawsuits, pretty much Canada it seems allows even today Mr. Elmasry the "Freedoms and Liberty" not accorded to Non Islamics in other countries,The Liberal Government at this time and their inaction of Political Correctness seems did not want to offend Islamics, in the end earning Canada the Distinct Title of "Nancy State" by our Western Counterparts. Criminals, and Terrorists alike.
Of course the Jewish Canadian population expressed outrage, but inaction by Liberal Canada over Mr. Elmasry's rants on National Television on the Michael Coren Show on October 19, 2004, stunning Michael Coren and his guests with his rant that Jews are deserving of death by terrorists, innocent or otherwise. Mr. Elmasry, it seems, has no problem with children being strangled by parents or anyone in Canada for refusing to wear a Hijab,( a piece of cloth measuring 20cm X 20 cm.) It seems Canadian's are initially shocked by young women being killed over honour killings of women in Canada over dark age religious values, who quickly switch the moral channel in what seems to be Canadians covering their eyes and ears saying the themselves "I can't hear you" La,La,La, La. Mr. Elmasry, stated his goal is to convert Canada to Islam, his quest actually came closer than Canadians think when Ontario came close to implementing Sharia Law in the Province a couple of years ago, Sharia Law losing by a slim margin by voters. Canada's inaction on letting him continue his quest of rants against non believers (Infidels) is certainly a step in the right direction, much to the dismay of moderate Muslims in Canada who most likely wish he would just go away.
Micheal Coren Show with Dr. Elmasry
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1OTfacRDBJo




Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (2)
at 10:25 on December 18th, 2007
Great insight as usual BarryArtiste. Mr. Elmasry's hateful and ignorant rants should raise eyebrows and concerns, especially among Canada's moderate Muslim population. They will probably react to his statements and actions with the usual dismay, if not outrage.
Although I would rarely invoke the wisdom or opinions of Ezra Levent, the most conservative of conservative Canadian pseudo-celebrities, in this case, the points attributed to him resonate quite clearly: our Human Rights courts, and other mechanisms of justice and good government should not serve as venues to protect and promote the indefensible--intolerance.
There is one thing that NowPublic readers should be aware of. Although the Canadian Islamic Congress may itself purport, and as Mr. Levant's article assumes, that the CIC is THE representative body of Muslims in Canada, it is not. The Muslim community is represented by dozens of organizations, with many others often considering the Canadian Islamic Congress as an extremely conservative and unsavoury red headed step child.
Macleans should also note this diversity. To highlight a demographic rise of Islam in Canada seems odd, considering the cultural diversity of this group (Indians, Nigerians, Fijians, Turks, Bosnians, Russian Tatars, Albanians, Bulgarians, etc) with each group having very little contact or shared commonality with one another. Canadian media should a play correct role (not to be confused with a politically correct role) of recognizing this diversity.
Much like the Canadian Islamic Congress being unrepresentative of the cultural and political diversity of Canadian Muslims, Canadian media should be aware that the phrase "Muslim Canadian" (much to Mr Elmasry's chagrin) is itself an unrepresentative and misleading term, even when used by certain Muslim Canadians to convince us otherwise.
at 16:38 on December 18th, 2007
Thanks for the comments, as some IMAMs incorrectly state a True Muslim is an Islamic follower of their interpretations of the Koran, something most Muslims find repugnant as they interpret it as it was meant to be, a benevolent religion, yet Imams bent on raisinf the Ire of the ignorant provide fodder for their misfortunes, whether they cannot find work, own a cadillac, or enjoy a Western lifestyle most of us only dream about, eg: celebrities, yet we do not blame the rich celebrities for our misfortune, though we may shake our heads at their lifestyle choices. We move on and be good people regardless of what religious leaders wish us to be. I feel Imams, most well educated get their followers from the uneducated as they are easily swayed, just as White Supremists hook their followers, or Rappers, flaunt their wealth Bling, bling, Women, drugs etc to the poor in an attempt to either just piss them off or idiolise them, making some want what their Idols have at any cost, usually criminal. Like Jennifer Lopez once said in a song, I am just like you (Poor people) I am Jenny from the Block, except Jenny forgets to let them know that she earns more money in a week than you and your family could possibly see or earn in a lifetime.
Anyways, thats enough of my ranting for now, thanks for the comments.