Canadian Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland on Monday initially refused to condemn slogans celebrating the Oct. 7, 2023 terrorist attack on Israel as hate speech â until she watched a video of the vile chants.
Freeland, a member of Canadaâs Liberal Party, plead ignorance when asked by a reporter if chants of âlong live October 7thâ and âOctober 7th proves weâre almost freeâ â both bellowed by anti-Israel protesters during a weekend demonstration in Ottawa â constitute hate speech.
âI wasn’t in Ottawa over the weekend,â Freeland said during a press conference in Montreal. âAnd I’m not aware of those specific reports.â
âAnd so it would be just wrong of me to comment on something that I am not specifically aware of.â
Video footage of the Saturday demonstration shows hundreds of protesters waving Palestinian flags near Ottawaâs Centre Block parliamentary building.
In addition to the pro-Hamas mantras Freeland was asked about, the apparent leader of the protest is heard chanting several other antisemitic slogans into a bullhorn, including, âFrom the river to the seaâ and âlong live the intifada.â
But Freeland, who also heads Canadaâs Ministry of Finance, changed her tune after seeing clips of the demonstration.
âHaving seen video from this weekend, I can only express shock and disgust at the antisemitism and glorification of terrorism that occurred on Parliament Hill,â she wrote on X early Monday evening.
âThis hate speech has no place in Canada. None.â
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau condemned the protest on Sunday, calling it âhateful intimidation.â
âThere is a difference between peaceful protest and hateful intimidation,â Trudeau wrote on X.
âIt is unconscionable to glorify the antisemitic violence and murder perpetrated by Hamas on October 7th,â he added. âThis rhetoric has no place in Canada. None.â
Several Canadians were among the 1,200 killed by Hamas terrorists during the Oct. 7 attack on the Jewish state.
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