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Sunday 18 Oct 2015 - 12:12 Makkah mean time-5-1-1437
Amira Elghawaby, a member of the National Council of Canadian Muslims. Image from CBC
Ottawa, (IINA) - Tackling the soaring anti-Muslim sentiments in Canada, Ottawa police are asking Muslims to report "all forms of abuse" after three Muslim women reportedly harassed verbally by strangers while wearing a headscarf, including one incident at a polling station, CBC News reported.
Staff Sgt. David M. Zackrias, head of the diversity and race relations section, told CBC News that leaders in the Muslim community passed along concerns to police.
He sent an email to Muslim groups to encourage those who are "being victimized" to reach out to police. "We're ensuring that these types of incidents are reported so we have a clear picture of what's happening and if there is a crime committed we need to investigate those incidents," Zackrias said. "If people are feeling intimidated and threatened, they should be reporting those incidents to police."
In one case, a woman was told to go back to her own country while she was voting, in another a woman was called a terrorist by a downtown passerby, said Amira Elghawaby, from the National Council of Canadian Muslims, an Ottawa-based group that tracks anti-Muslim assaults.
"The women are visibly Muslim, they wear the headscarf, and so certainly there's a lot of concern in the communities right now about a sense of safety," she said. "It's very important to track what's going on."
Elghawaby encouraged victims not to be afraid to report harassment or anti-Muslim messages, which defaced federal election signs in Montreal in September.
She said that her organization has seen a spike across the country in anti-Muslim messaging recently as face coverings, such as the niqab, became a debate during the federal election campaign.
Zunera Ishaq, who won a court battle to wear a niqab while taking the citizenship oath, took part in the ceremony on Oct. 2.
"Some people feel that (the increase in anti-Muslim incidents) may be linked to the anti-Muslim rhetoric that has been very present in the current election and so we're really encouraging people to report any kind of hate incident, hate crime so that we can respond as communities to that," she said.
Muslims are the fastest growing religious community in Canada, OnIslam reported quoting the country’s statistical agency, Statistics Canada.
It is worth mentioning that Canada’s Muslim population increased by 82 percent over the past decade from about 579,000 in 2001 to more than one million in 2011.
Muslims represent 3.2 percent of Canada’s total population.
SM/IINA
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