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Ezra Levant in Canada's Kafka Court

Our northern neighbor's "Human Rights Commissions" have precious little to do with human rights
 

Young conservative: Ezra LevantYoung conservative: Ezra Levant If Ezra Levant's name were better known, his story, ironically, would likely be less significant.

Levant is the former publisher of the Calgary-based conservative magazine the Western Standard, one of only two publications in Canada to reprint the drawings of Muhammad that sparked the Cartoon Intifada in early 2006. In the face of intense pressure from bullies and busybodies to deprive his readers of an informative account of the biggest news story in the world at the time, Levant defiantly upheld his and his fellow citizens' freedom of thought and right to free expression.

Nonetheless, the Western Standard was a tiny redoubt of sanity amid coverage of the Danish cartoons that generally ran the full gamut from obsequious to craven. In a target-rich environment stretching from Marrakech to Manchester, the Classical period of the Intoonfada --- the period that consisted most prominently in righteous rioting, murder plots, and the torching of embassies --- passed Levant and his magazine by.

Pusillanimous self-censorship notwithstanding, crude terrorism failed to undermine freedom of speech, and the popular enthusiasm for sustained mob violence dried up, as it was bound to do. Although the threat of assassination continues to loom in the background, the Intoonfada evolved into a Baroque period. Its primary battlefield is now the courtroom, where the forces of religious intimidation hope to use the institutions of civil law to subordinate civil law to the dictates of Islamic piety.

Don't get mad, but: Here are all of the Intoonfada 'ToonsDon't get mad, but: Here are all of the Intoonfada 'Toons Some jurisdictions are more propitious for this effort than others. Here in the United States, for example, despite fears on the left of growing theocracy, explicit constitutional safeguards ensure that political speech is unrestricted. But our northern neighbor has no codified bill of rights. Instead, as a dominion of the British crown, Canada's basic liberties persisted for most of its history as common law traditions. Today, they are enumerated in a Charter qualified by a "limitation clause," and hence remain vulnerable to legal challenge in ways the the provisions of the US Bill of Rights are not. Having failed to capture a big trophy like freedom of speech in Denmark, theocratic thugs are doing their best to silence individual voices like Levant's through costly, abusive litigation.

To be sure, no legitimate civil or criminal court in Canada would grant standing to a complainant seeking to prosecute the free exercise of political speech. But an alternative judicial system that sprang up in the 1970s for a specific, narrow purpose has wildly outstripped its mandate, and afforded the forces of religious censorship the opportunity to put authors, editors, and publishers on trial.

The Canadian Human Rights Act of 1977 established "Human Rights Commissions" in the various Canadian provinces to investigate and redress racial, religious, and gender discrimination in employment, housing, and related affairs. But the nebulous language of the act --- language that one of its authors, Alan Borovoy, acknowledges is in dire need of clarification --- allows unscrupulous individuals to proscribe any speech that offends their sensibilities. What's more, the standards of evidence and proof on offer in the Human Rights Commission tribunals are a sad parody of a recognizable justice system.

Alberta Human Rights Commission: Artist's conceptionAlberta Human Rights Commission: Artist's conception The only condition that needs to be met for a defendant to be found in violation of the Human Rights Act is that his speech is "likely to expose" the complainant to "hatred or contempt." Imagine an article on abuse of women in a cloistered religious community, or on an ethnic or sectarian war in which atrocities are committed by both sides. Any accurate reporting on such affairs obviously might catalyze hatred or contempt among ignorant readers. By that fact alone, provided someone were found to bring suit, the author of articles like these could be convicted as a human rights abuser.

Worst of all, the Human Rights Act provides for all complainants' legal fees to be paid for by the state, no matter how frivolous their claims. Defendants' legal fees, by contrast, are subsidized to the tune of zero percent, no matter how meritorious a defendant's case. In other words, attempting to suppress free speech in Canada is a risk-free investment.

Which brings us back to the case of Ezra Levant. Amid the furor of the early stages of the Intoonfada, Syed Soharwardy, a Pakistani-born imam who serves as national president of the somewhat grandiosely-named Islamic Supreme Council of Canada, quietly did his best to shut down publication of the Western Standard, and punish its publisher for transgressing the laws of a faith to which he does not subscribe.

Not a happy camper: Syed SoharwardyNot a happy camper: Syed Soharwardy Soharwardy's first recourse was to lobby the Calgary police to arrest Levant for the crime of printing a cartoon. When that effort proved unsuccessful, Sohawardy moved on to Plan B, a barely legible handwritten complaint against Levant and the Western Standard to the Alberta Human Rights Commission, which needs to be read in full to be believed.

The human rights violations Soharwardy claims Levant perpetrated include:

  • Levant calling Soharwardy "radical" during a radio interview
  • Levant claiming the right to publish the Danish cartoons
  • Levant "defam[ing] and insult[ing]" Soharwardy and his family by publishing the cartoons
  • Levant denying that "my beloved Muhammad (peace be upon him) was the best in manners, best in etiquettes, and the most intelligent human being"
  • Levant "mentally tortur[ing]" Soharwardy

For good measure, Soharwardy concludes his brief by protesting to the Alberta HRC that "the response from Calgary police" --- i.e., in declining to incarcerate Levant for publishing magazine articles --- "is not reasonable."

To repeat the allegation aloud is to reveal it, and the judicial practices supporting it, as a sinister farce: A man is on trial in an ostensibly free country for (a) hurting someone's feelings and (b) asserting his right to free speech. For his part, the complainant considers the two elements on a par; by his lights, subjectively-perceived offensive speech and the assertion of the right to free speech are equally egregious violations of his human rights. And rather than treat the complaint as a cry for help from a pitiable character in dire need of a lesson in civics, the institution presiding over the case subjected the defendant to a two-year-long prosecution costing him upwards of $100,000, in which the mere fact that he was accused predetermined his eventual conviction.

The true meaning of freedom: You're free to keep your mouth shutThe true meaning of freedom: You're free to keep your mouth shut Or at least it would have done, if Levant had not brought a video camera with him to his interrogation and exposed the proceedings to the light of day. If a latter-day Franz Kafka were to produce a reality television show, he would have difficulty adequately capturing the fastidious, baleful bureaucratic mockery of due process at the heart of the HRC hearings.

Despite the fact that neither truthfulness nor benign intent can exculpate Levant, as Sohawardy's mere claim to having taken offense at Levant's words satisfies the tribunal's standard of proof, Levant's interrogator insists on prodding him, repeatedly, to confess just what he was up to. She does take notes, but she might as well have been doodling, since Levant is guilty in virtue of having been accused, and no answer of his can change that. But Levant will have none of it. In his opening and closing statements, he refuses to recognize the authority of the tribunal to render a judgment on him, and challenges his interrogator to recommend a guilty verdict, so that the process can finally end and he can file his own suit in a real court. Levant represents himself, moreover, because the tribunal bars him from seeking counsel of his own choosing.

In the month since Levant's hearing at the HRC tribunal, his videos went viral on Youtube, and the public backlash forced Soharwardy to drop his case. He could not withdraw, however, without firing an ominous Parthian shot, averring that "Canadian society is mature enough not to absorb the messages that the cartoons sent" --- as if anyone must satisfy an antiliterate blackmailing cleric of his or her maturity in order to consume literature.

But even in being vindicated, Levant lost. He lost his magazine, lost a hundred thousand dollars in legal fees, and lost hundreds of hours fighting a risible lawsuit that should have been tossed into a wastebasket after a cursory reading. And Soharwardy, despite the deserved opprobrium he earned himself, substantially succeeded in his objective. Any newspaper or magazine publisher who wishes to run a story that could even unreasonably be interpreted as criticizing Islam now knows that he may be subject to the years of persecution and ruinous debts that Levant faced, no matter how pure his intentions or how scrupulously accurate the article is.

In other words, Soharwardy has given journalists across Canada reason to be terrified of writing about Islam. That tactic has a well-worn, but nonetheless indispensable name. Terrorism has found a witting accomplice in Canada's Kafkaesque grey tribunals.



Daniel Koffler is a Clarendon Scholar and graduate student in philosophy at the University of Oxford.


More...
 

Anonymous


clarification

Thank you for the insightful article.  It's important that these sorts of stories make it beyond Canada's borders.

That said, I must take issue with a statement you made. You write: "...our northern neighbor has no codified bill of rights.  Instead, as a dominion of the British crown, Canada's basic liberties persist as strong but inherently vulnerable common law traditions." 

First, Canada is not a dominion of the British Crown.  Rather, the Dominion of Canada is a sovereign state, and Elizabeth II is the Queen of Canada (as well as queen of a number of other countries, including the United Kingdom).  Small point, but often misunderstood. 

The more important clarification, however is that the Constitution of Canada, includes a codified "bill" of rights.  Along side common law protections, and those granted by statutes such as the English Bill of Rights, Canadian Bill of Rights, and Magna Carta, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, as part of the Constitution of Canada, is part of the supreme law of Canada, much as the Constitution of the USA is the supreme law of the United States.  Refer to the following link for the text of the Charter:

http://laws.justice.gc.ca/en/charter/ 





Ali Eteraz


Very good except

For the last line. TERRORISM? Really? Is it really TERRORISM that has found a witting accomplice in Syed Sohrawardy? Maybe STUPIDITY. Definitely illiberal values. But TERRORISM? I guess it was your Parthian shot.

By the way, Sohrawardy got taken to the Human Rights Commission by three Muslim women from his mosque on the basis of discrimination. So the HRC cuts both ways.

Otherwise, I agree with the general argument whole-heartedly. 

http://alieteraz.com/





Karl


wow

These easily-offended and litigious Muslims surely are cause for concern.  However, Canada "has no codified bill of rights"?  The Charter of Rights and Freedoms is just such an act, codified into the Constitution as part of the Constitution Act of 1982.  It was preceded by the Bill of Rights (1960), although that did not have the weight of the Constitution behind it.  Certainly, we're somewhat late to the game in codifying it, and we're letting Muslims abuse it, but we do have it.





Daniel Koffler


To clarify

"The core distinction between the United States Bill of Rights and Canadian Charter is the existence of the limitations and notwithstanding clauses....[D]ue to the limitations clause, where a violation of a right exists, the law will not necessarily grant protection of that right. In contrast, rights under the US Bill of Rights are absolute...."

That's what I mean. There's a lot of overlapping terminology, but the Charter isn't the same kind of law as the US Constitution. 





E. Gilman


That's what I mean?

With respect, I would suggest that you do not fully appreciate the Canadian legal system and what happened in Canada regarding Mr. Levant.

First you state that there is no codified set of rights and that Canada's protection of right is limited to an archaic reliance on the common law. When one pointed out that Canada does have a Charter of Rights and Freedoms, you refer to the limitation clause and write, "That's what I mean." Seriously, do you think that that is what you meant? If you read the caselaw out of both the US and Canadian Supreme Courts, it sounds that you may be surprised to see much they parallel (and actually, rely on) each other's decisions.

Furthermore, the limitation clause of the Charter is no
different in principle than analogous traditions in American
Constitutional traditions. For example, the Canadian Charter protects
citizens against "arbitrary arrest or detention." Yet, in Canada,
random roadblocks are occasionally set up by authorities to conduct
roadside tests to test drivers' sobriety. The courts have found that
such programs are clearly "arbitrary detentions" of citizens and
therefore a breach of one's constitutional rights. However, the courts
have further found that the utility served by such programs far outweighs the
severity of the breach of the rights and were deemed to be constitutionally valid. One should note American courts have performed analogous legal gymnastics to justify similar breaches of the rights of its citizens despite the lack of a "limitation clause."

Second, Levant was never on trial. A complaint was lodged and it was being investigated. Levant was never in jeopardy of being found to have committed a criminal offence. The human rights commission is an administrative body that is designed to address important matters such as sexism or discrimination in the workplace. Was this inquiry a tortured, abuse of the commission's mandate? Yes, absolutely. But the only person who found Levant to be culpable (until the complaint was abandoned) was you. There is no reason to believe that the commission itself would not have ultimately decided that the complaint being investigated was baseless.





Anonymous


He's not the only one

Mark Steyn, a writer for National Review (www.nationalreview.com) is facing the same type of issue with the HRC.





Daniel Koffler


Just one more

"Furthermore, the limitation clause of the Charter is no different in principle than analogous traditions in American Constitutional traditions."

No, that's got it backwards, the limitation clause of the Charter precisely is different in principle from the provisions of the US Constitution; it's in practice and in judicial interpretation that the distinctions are becoming blurred. The fact that American and Canadian judges occasionally reference Canadian and American precedent, respectively, could scarcely be more irrelevant. American judges, including at the Supreme Court level, occasionally cite decisions in continental European courts. That in no way undermines the fact that the European Civil Law system, based on Napoleonic code, is fundamentally different from the legal systems of former British possessions. 

As for the casuistic defense of an inquisitorial process with no credible standards of proof, evidence, or due process, which any aggrieved bully can activate risk-free, which even in the flimsiest of cases (such as Levant's) can bankrupt innocent defendants --- well, that speaks for itself.





Daniel Koffler


sentence clarified

I changed the sentence in question to be more clear.



Anonymous


"the utility served by such

"the utility served by such programs far outweighs the
severity of the breach of the rights"

Although I'm not a lawyer, I'd shudder to think that there could be many standards such as this when it comes to American constitutional law. Utility? That's scary. At least assuming that it has anything to do with a presumption of superiority or even equality on the part of utilitarian social philosophies when judged against the classical liberal values enshrined in the Bill of Rights.





Daniel Koffler


Indeed

If E. Gillman's utility claim were true, it could be taken as a reductio against (at least strong) utilitarianism. I don't think it is true, though.



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