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Ottawa: In
an astonishing decision, the Canadian Human Rights
Tribunal ruled on September 2 that Section 13, Canada’s
human rights hate speech law, is an unconstitutional
violation of the Charter right to free expression
because of its penalty provisions.
Section 13(1) of the Canadian Human Rights Act is an
anti-hate law that was conceived in the 1960s to target
racist telephone hotlines and then expanded in 2001 to
include the Internet. For the last decade, one man,
Ottawa lawyer Richard Warman, has been its almost
exclusive complainant.
This decision by Tribunal chair Athanasios Hadjis, in
effect, strips the Canadian Human Rights Commission of
its legal mandate to pursue hate on the Internet; a
mandate it has strenuously defended despite accusations
that this activity amounts to censorship. Mr. Hadjis
found that that the pursuit of Section 13(1) cases “can
no longer be considered exclusively remedial,
preventative and conciliatory in nature the law” and the
section has “become more penal in nature.”
It is now up to the government and Canadian Human Rights
Commission, which can appeal the ruling to Federal
Court, to take the next step. Voice of the Martyrs’ CEO,
Glenn Penner said, in response to this ruling, “My hope
is that the government will move to repeal Section 13
entirely and leave the prosecution of hate crimes in the
criminal system where it belongs.”
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