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This has been a good week to be in Canada — or an awful week,
depending on your point of view — to understand just how irretrievably
biased and potentially racist the Canadian press has become. For, after the
arrest of 17 Canadian Muslims on “terrorism” charges, the Toronto
Globe and Mail and, to a slightly lesser extent, the National Post, have indulged
in an orgy of finger-pointing that must reduce the chances of any fair trial
and, at the same time, sow fear in the hearts of the country’s more than
700,000 Muslims. In fact, if I were a Canadian Muslim right now, I’d already
be checking the airline timetables for a flight out of town. Or is that the
purpose of this press campaign?
First, the charges. Even a lawyer for one of the accused has talked of a plot
to storm the Parliament in Ottawa, hold MPs hostage and chop off the head of
Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Without challenging the “facts” or
casting any doubt on their sources — primarily the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police or Canada’s leak-dripping Canadian Security Intelligence Service
(CSIS) — reporters have told their readers that the 17 were variously
planning to blow up Parliament, CSIS’s headquarters, the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation and sundry other targets. Every veiled and chadored Muslim woman
relative of the accused has been photographed and their pictures printed, often
on front pages. “Home-grown terrorists” has become theme of the
month — even though the “terrorists” have yet to stand trial.
They were in receipt of “fertilizers”, we were told, which could
be turned into explosives. When it emerged that Canadian police officers had
already switched the “fertilizers” for a less harmful substance,
nobody followed up the implications of this apparent “sting”. A
Buffalo radio station down in the US even announced that the accused had actually
received “explosives”. Bingo: Guilty before trial.
Of course, the Muslim-bashers have laced this nonsense with the usual pious
concern for the rights of the accused. “Before I go on, one disclaimer,”
purred the Globe and Mail’s Margaret Wente. “Nothing has been proved
and nobody should rush to judgment.” Which, needless to say, Wente then
went on to do in the same paragraph. “The exposure of our very own home-grown
terrorists, if that’s what the men aspired to be, was both predictably
shocking and shockingly predictable.” And just in case we missed the point
of this hypocrisy, Wente ended her column by announcing that “Canada is
not exempt from home-grown terrorism”. Angry young men are the tinderbox
and Islamism is the match.
The country will probably have better luck than most at “putting
out the fire”, she adds. But who, I wonder, is really lighting the match?
For a very unpleasant — albeit initially innocuous — phrase has
now found its way into the papers. The accused 17 — and, indeed their
families and sometimes the country’s entire Muslim community — are
now referred to as “Canadian-born”. Well, yes, they are Canadian-born.
But there’s a subtle difference between this and being described as a
“Canadian” — as other citizens of this vast country are in
every other context. And the implications are obvious; there are now two types
of Canadian citizen: The Canadian-born variety (Muslims) and Canadians (the
rest).
If this seems finicky, try the following sentence from the Globe and
Mail’s front page on Tuesday, supposedly an eyewitness account of the
police arrest operation: “Parked directly outside his ... office was a
large, gray, cube-shaped truck and, on the ground nearby, he recognized one
of the two brown-skinned young men who had taken possession of the next door
rented unit...” Come again? Brown-skinned? What in God’s name is
this outrageous piece of racism doing on the front page of a major Canadian
daily? What is “brown-skinned” supposed to mean — if it is
not just a revolting attempt to isolate Muslims as the “other” in
Canada’s highly multicultural society? I notice, for example, that when
the paper obsequiously refers to Toronto’s police chief and his reportedly
brilliant cops, he is not referred to as “white-skinned” (which
he most assuredly is). Amid this swamp, Canada’s journalists are managing
to soften the realities of their country’s new military involvement in
Afghanistan.
More than 2,000 troops are deployed around Kandahar in active military operations
against Taleban insurgents. They are taking the place of US troops, who will
be transferred to fight even more Muslims insurgents in Iraq.
Canada is thus now involved in the Afghan war — those who doubt this
should note the country has already shelled out $1.8bn in “defense spending”
in Afghanistan and only $500m in “additional expenditures”, including
humanitarian assistance and democratic renewal (sic) — and, by extension,
in Iraq. In other words, Canada has gone to war in the Middle East.
None of this, according to the Canadian foreign minister, could be the cause
of Muslim anger at home, although Jack Hooper — the CSIS chief who has
a lot to learn about the Middle East but talks far too much — said a few
days ago that “we had a high threat profile (in Canada) before Afghanistan.
In any event, the presence of Canadians and Canadian forces there has elevated
that threat somewhat.” I read all this on a flight from Calgary to Ottawa
this week, sitting just a row behind Tim Goddard, his wife Sally and daughter
Victoria, who were chatting gently and smiling bravely to the crew and fellow
passengers. In the cargo hold of our aircraft lay the coffin of Goddard’s
other daughter, Nichola, the first Canadian woman soldier to be killed in action
in Afghanistan.
The next day, he scattered sand on Nichola’s coffin at Canada’s
national military cemetery. A heartrending photograph of him appeared in the
Post — but buried away on Page 6. And on the front page? A picture of
British policemen standing outside the Bradford home of a Muslim “who
may have links to Canada”. Allegedly, of course.