The Canadian Human Rights Commission has dismissed a hate speech complaint against Maclean’s magazine.
Brought by Mohamed Elmasry, national president of the Canadian Islamic Congress, the complaint was the centrepiece of a three-pronged offense against what he sees as Islamophobia in the national newsweekly, with columnists Mark Steyn and Barbara Amiel the main offenders.
An identical complaint, brought with the help of three Muslim law students who became the public faces of the complaint, was rejected in Ontario on jurisdictional grounds. The third was heard this month by a British Columbia tribunal, which is now deliberating.
Announcing the decision (the CHRC does not publicize dismissals of complaints), Maclean’s said in a statement that it “is in keeping with our long-standing position that the article in question, “The Future Belongs to Islam,” an excerpt from Mark Steyn’s best-selling book America Alone, was a worthy piece of commentary on important geopolitical issues, entirely within the bounds of normal journalistic practice.”
“Though gratified by the decision, Maclean’s continues to assert that no human rights commission, whether at the federal or provincial level, has the mandate or the expertise to monitor, inquire into, or assess the editorial decisions of the nation’s media. And we continue to have grave concerns about a system of complaint and adjudication that allows a media outlet to be pursued in multiple jurisdictions on the same complaint, brought by the same complainants, subjecting it to costs of hundreds of thousands of dollars, to say nothing of the inconvenience. We enthusiastically support those parliamentarians who are calling for legislative review of the commissions with regard to speech issues.”
Specifically at issue was Maclean’s publication of the article on its Web site. The federal human rights commission is the only such body that properly deals with hate spread via the internet, although there have been some apparent exceptions, such as a recent order of the Alberta Human Rights and Citizenship Commission that a pastor refrain from “disparaging” comments about homosexuals in his internet postings and private emails.
The ruling means the CHRC does not believe there is evidence to support a complaint that the Steyn article was “likely to expose” Muslims to hatred or contempt.