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TORONTO: People wave flags atop cars in traffic during a demonstration to voice support for the people of Palestine, at Toronto City Hall in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on May 15, 2021. — AFP
TORONTO: People wave flags atop cars in traffic during a demonstration to voice support for the people of Palestine, at Toronto City Hall in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, on May 15, 2021. — AFP

Canada’s Poilievre vows deportation over antisemitism

OTTAWA: Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre on the campaign trail Saturday vowed to deport foreigners from Canada for criminal hatemongering, accusing pro-Palestinian protestors’ “hate marches” for contributing to a spike in antisemitism. Poilievre was campaigning in an Ottawa electoral district contested by Liberal leader and Prime Minister Mark Carney, who this week drew the ire of his Benjamin Netanyahu over remarks on the war in Gaza.

“We will bring in tougher laws to target vandalism, hate marches that break laws (and) violent attacks based on ethnicity and religion,” Poilievre told reporters. “Anyone who is here on a visitor visa who carries out law-breaking will be deported from this country,” he added, words echoing messaging from the administration of US President Donald Trump, which has deported pro-Palestinian student protesters.

Poilievre has in the past sought to distance himself from Trump, whose economic attacks and threats to annex the United States’ northern neighbor have outraged the Canadian electorate. The Canadian conservative decried pro-Palestinian protests, saying they were contributing to a worsening situation with regard to hate crimes. He condemned “the targeting of synagogues and Jewish schools with hate, vandalism, violence (and) firebombings.”

In Canada, the Jewish organization B’nai Brith said in a report that the number of antisemitic acts more than doubled over the past two years. Since the start of the war in Gaza, there have been several firebombings and shooting attacks on Jewish schools and synagogues in Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver. Pro-Palestinian encampments at universities and marches that sprung up in response to the Zionist entity’s flagrant violations of international law and relentless attacks on civilians have been mostly peaceful but police have in some cases charged protestors. 

On Tuesday, Carney was heckled at a rally by a protestor who shouted that the Zionist entity was perpetrating a genocide in Gaza. Carney responded by highlighting Canada’s restrictions on some arms shipments to the Zionist entity, to which Netanyahu responded on X: “Instead of supporting (the Zionist entity), a democracy fighting a just war with just means against the barbarians of Hamas, he attacks the only Jewish state.” Carney later clarified that he did not hear, nor supports, the Gaza genocide claim and called for “every effort to establish a ceasefire in Gaza.” — AFP

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