Muslim group sues Canadian prime minister for defamation

Defamation suit seeks retraction and $100,000

June 3, 2014 | Web First
Omar Sacirbey | Religion News Service

The National Council of Canadian Muslims is suing Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper for defamation, alleging his spokesman linked the group to terrorism in January. The suit seeks a retraction and $100,000 in damages.

The row began when council leaders criticized Harper for including Rabbi Daniel Korobkin, who hosted anti-Muslim bloggers Pamela Geller and Robert Spencer, at an event last fall in Toronto.

The prime minister's communications director, Jason MacDonald, responded by saying, “We will not take seriously criticism from an organization with documented ties to a terrorist organization such as Hamas.”

Hamas is listed as a terrorist organization in Canada.

Reached by email on May 29, MacDonald, who is also named in the suit, declined to comment.

The council wanted to give Harper time to either retract the comments or offer evidence proving them. After receiving neither, the group filed the suit.

The council said it has consistently condemned terrorism.

The council was affiliated with the Council on American-Islamic Relations and was known as CAIR-CAN until last year, when it changed its name.

CAIR spokesman Ibrahim Hooper said a court ruling in favor of the council, which is independent from CAIR in the United States, could have an impact in the U.S. “If the Canadian organization is able to prove there was defamation, that might make Islamophobes think twice before making this baseless claim,” Hooper said.

--Posted June 3, 2014

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