
The council urged Ottawa to move beyond symbolic recognition and implement concrete safeguards as anti-Muslim hate crimes have surged 94% since the deadly 2021 attack on the Afzaal family in London, Ontario.
The Canadian Muslim Public Affairs Council released the comprehensive policy handbook Thursday in Ottawa to mark the fourth anniversary of the deadly hate-motivated vehicle attack that killed four members of the Afzaal family in London, Ontario. CMPAC Executive Director Khaled Alqazzaz said the June 6, 2021 attack was "not an isolated tragedy" but exposed systemic realities Muslim communities have long warned about, noting that Islamophobia remains embedded in institutional systems beyond individual incidents.
Alqazzaz stated the handbook draws on parliamentary reports and academic research to demand stronger federal protections for mosques and Islamic schools, dedicated funding streams and improved accountability within public institutions. He criticized Prime Minister Mark Carney's decision to dissolve the special representative on Islamophobia in favor of an advisory council, saying expectations remain high for the new body to address anti-Muslim hate "in a real and direct way."
Justice For All Canada Executive Director Taha Ghayyur told the news conference that anti-Muslim violence is driven by a transnational ideology connecting attacks across borders, citing the 2017 Quebec City mosque shooting and attacks in New Zealand and the United States alongside the Afzaal murders. "Different countries, different perpetrators, different circumstances, but a common thread is the dehumanization of Muslims," he said, pointing to Statistics Canada data showing hate crimes targeting Muslims rose 94% in 2023 while overall hate incidents have more than doubled since 2019.
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Ghayyur identified white supremacy, transnational hate and foreign interference as contributing factors, naming India and China when questioned about governments linked to persecution of Muslim minorities. New Democratic Party House Leader Heather McPherson said Muslim Canadians continue to face discrimination, intimidation and vandalism including attacks on mosques, adding that Ottawa must combat all forms of hate including Islamophobia, antisemitism, anti-Palestinian racism and anti-Indigenous racism.
Three generations of the Pakistani-origin Afzaal family died when Nathaniel Veltman drove a pickup truck into them as they walked along a road in London. The victims were physiotherapist Salman Afzaal, 46; his wife Madiha, 44, a doctoral candidate at Western University; their daughter Yumna, 15, an honor-roll student; and Salman's mother Talat, 74, the family matriarch — the couple's nine-year-old son was the sole survivor. Veltman was convicted in 2023 of four counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder, with prosecutors establishing the attack as terrorism motivated by white nationalist ideology.
Source: Yeni Safak