Media, free speech, and human rights

By: Law is Cool · November 2, 2009 · Filed Under Civil Rights, Media Law · Add Comment 

Media aren’t the best friends of human rights

Max Yalden was an Official Languages Commissioner in 1977-84 and the head of the Canadian Human Rights Commission in 1987-96. Recalling the Maclean’s case and other contentious issues of free speech versus human rights, Haroon Siddiqui reviews Yalden’s just-published memoir:

Yalden’s central message is that Canada’s human rights regime works reasonably well, notwithstanding the media’s hissy fit.

AdviceScene

Freedom of hate speech

By: Daniel Simard · May 12, 2008 · Filed Under Administrative Law, Civil Rights, Criminal Law · 12 Comments 

The following piece has been reproduced with the permission of the author. Law is Cool does not necessarily advocate or promote the views contained within.

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Free to Attack Marginalized Groups

By: Law is Cool · April 14, 2008 · Filed Under Aboriginal Law, Administrative Law, Civil Rights, Criminal Law, Legal Reform, Politics, Pop Culture · 6 Comments 

The Ahenakew affair: a bad law, an opportunity missed

By Marjaleena Repo

The David Ahenakew Affair, after five years in the courts, has sprung back with full force after the Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations (FSIN) voted to reinstate him as one its senators. The media have reacted with vehement disapproval as have Jewish organizations. The provincial and federal governments – the latter long overdue in its own apology and restitution to Aboriginal people for a variety of oppressive policies over the last century – are in high dudgeon, threatening censure and sanctions against the FSIN. (Mr. Ahenakew, with the storm gathering, declined the offer of reinstatement.)

Mr. Ahenakew’s brutish comments were made at an emergency meeting December 12, 2002, in Saskatoon, organized to oppose yet another detrimental policy imposed on First Nations people. He was angry and agitated – reportedly to the point of being incoherent in his speech – but his most offensive remarks came after the speech, in an encounter with a reporter (described by the reporter as an interview and by Ahenakew as an aggressive ambush). The reporter taped Ahenakew blaming the Jews for creating World War II and calling them “a disease.”ť

Five days later Ahenakew, in a press conference, apologized profusely for his offensive and hurtful language, stating that his comments were made in anger and frustration over the plight of native people in Canada, but that this did not excuse them. He asked to reach out to the Jewish community.

This was the moment when history could have been made, by a new level of communication and trust-building between Ahenakew, his own constituency whom he had hurt and the Jewish community, victim of his ignorant and deeply offensive comments.

If Jewish organizations had accepted the apology, one can imagine only positive outcomes: a deeper understanding of how wrong his words were and what the actual experience of German Jews was, from their relentless ostracism to the “final solution” in concentration camps.

With David Ahenakew leading, prepared to be a changed man, his own people, from young to old, could have entered a rich experience of empathetic learning with many connections to their own suffering under brutal colonial rule. A sign of forgiveness (and compassion) about one man’s human failing would have brought Jews and Aboriginals together, in the spirit of good will, resulting in deepening connections and new friendships. Both peoples, Aboriginals and Jews, have a history of resilience and survival, and when given a chance are capable of transcending and recovering from the worst of circumstances, as well as forgiving those who have hurt them and genuinely repent it.

TThis opportunity for transformation and restorative justice by building on the strengths of the people involved was missed when the Jewish leadership rejected, out of hand, Ahenakew’s apology. It wasn’t good enough. They wanted “more”…

Canada’s highly problematic anti-hate law, Section 319 of the Criminal Code, was invoked. Ahenakew was charged with “inciting hatred” and cornered, forced to try to defend himself against criminal charges. With apology and amends rejected, the case proceeded to a conviction in 2005 — overturned on appeal June 2006 on the grounds that a crucial element, “willfulness,” was missing as the remarks were made in confrontation with a reporter rather than before an audience. Saskatchewan is retrying Ahenakew.

The 40-year-old anti-hate law was flawed from the beginning because it pursues thought-crimes: dissenting opinions, prejudices, stupidity and ignorance among them. One of the first charged were young Canadian nationalists in Toronto, demonstrating against a Shriners parade with a “Yankee Go Home!” leaflet, supposedly hateful towards all Americans!

Age has not improved this unnecessary law. It now has its offspring in human rights commissions, where a couple of well-known journalists of the right, Ezra Levant and Mark Steyn, have lately had to defend themselves against charges of “encouraging hatred” in their writings. But, significantly, in their case, they are being defended to the hilt by editorials and columnists across the country, on the grounds of freedom of expression, no matter how distasteful — and wrong— their opinions are to people whose beliefs and ethnicity they offend.

The explanation might be that Levant and Steyn are attacking an increasingly marginalized group of Canadians – Muslims and Arabs. David Ahenakew, on the other hand, part of a powerless and long-suffering group of original Canadians, having offended a powerful ethnic and religious group, has no such support for his right to be ignorant and wrong, and ends up sharing his guilt with all Aboriginals, to boot. (Contrast this with MP Tom Lukiwski who, having grossly attacked homosexuals, was upon his mea culpa instantaneously forgiven by the Conservative government.)

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TwumZ5I6vkM[/youtube]
(We’re still looking for it on campaign literature).


Offensive ideas and concepts, of course, need to and will be challenged, and expressing them will have consequences. But these consequences ought to be social and political — allowing for apologies and regrets — not criminal, with catastrophic consequences for those caught by a law, which to quote Charles Dickens, “is a (sic) ass.”

(April 6, 08)

Marjaleena Repo is a freelance writer who lives in Saskatoon. She can be reached at mrepo@sasktel.net

Updates

We made some further edits with the piece over some sections we found problematic.
This article has since been published in the Prairie Messenger and the Prince Albert Daily Herald.


Reproduced with the permission of the author. Emphasis in bold, commentary in italics and links added, and some material removed.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this post are the views of the author, and not of this site. We have presented this piece to try and provide different perspectives on the issue.

The author is a senior advisor to David Orchard and former Progressive Conservative Party Vice-president for Saskatchewan.