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Canadian parliament passes anti-Islamophobia motion

The Canadian parliament has passed a landmark anti-Islamophobia and religious discrimination motion that calls on politicians to condemn anti-Islamic behaviour and rhetoric.

The vote follows months of fierce debate in Canada, including protests from both the motionโ€™s supporters and detractors.

Opponents argued the private membersโ€™ motion, which calls on the government to โ€œcondemn Islamophobia and all forms of systemic racism and religious discriminationโ€, will limit free speech in the country and single out Islam for special treatment.

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Liberal MPs and Conservatives accused one another of using rising levels of prejudice and hate crimes against Muslims in Canada as a political football.

The motion explicitly called on the government to โ€œquell the increasing public climate of hate and fearโ€.

It also said there should be put into action a โ€œgovernment-wide approach for reducing or eliminating systemic racism and religious discriminationโ€.

This would require the government to collect date on hate crimes, conduct official assessments of affected communities and present findings to parliament within eight months.

The non-binding motion, known as M-103 was passed by 201 votes to 91.

Liberal MP Irqa Khalid, who tabled the motion, was cheered loudly by her party as the vote passed.

The majority of Canadaโ€™s Conservative MPs voted against the motion.

Speaking after the vote, Ms Khalid told reporters: โ€œI’m really happy that the vote today has shown positive support for this motion and I’m really looking forward to the committee taking on this study.โ€

Conservative MP David Anderson put forward an amendment to the motion to try and change the wording to include other religions. He argued the motion should be to โ€œcondemn all forms of systemic racism, religious intolerance and discrimination of Muslims, Jews, Christians, Sikhs, Hindus and other religious communitiesโ€.

But the amendment was rejected by Liberals. Ms Khalid said: โ€œReally, changing the wording of the motion would have watered it down and I think the committee can really look into this if it is an issue.โ€

Mr Anderson later said: โ€œI think that many of us have wanted to have a mature discussion about this for a long time, and I think actually Ms Khalid and I would be on the exact same wavelength on that issue.โ€

The motion caused some confusion in Canada, with many believing it to be a โ€œbillโ€, or a โ€œlawโ€.

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