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Montreal

PEGIDA Qubec cancels march after anti-racist groups convene

A march organized by sympathizers of a Europe-based anti-Islam, anti-immigration group called PEGIDA was cancelled on Saturday after hundreds of people showed up to protest against PEGIDA itself.

Anti-Islam group with European roots and National Front sympathies organizes in Quebec

Two women at the anti-PEGIDA protest share a laugh together while waiting to see whether members of the pro-nationalist group, anti-Islam group would show up. (Radio-Canada)

A march organized by sympathizers of a Europe-based anti-Islam, anti-immigration group called PEGIDA was cancelled on Saturday after hundreds ofpeople showed up to protest against PEGIDA itself.

The self-described leader of the relatively newPEGIDAQubecchapter,Jean-FranoisAsgard, told Radio-Canada that"Islam needs to reform itself or leave the West."

Well-known activist Jaggi Singh said PEGIDA is a collection of neo-Nazis, Islamophobes and internet trolls. (Radio-Canada)

JaggiSingh of the No One Is Illegal activist group helped organize Saturday's counter-protest.

Hundreds of people toting signs denouncing racism andIslamophobiaarrived 30 minutes prior to the scheduled start time of thePEGIDAmarch, set to take place in a largely Muslim community in Montreal calledLittle Maghreb.

Just over 100 people hadRSVP'dtoPEGIDAQubec'smarch, while nearly 900 members ofAntifa(anti-fascism) and other anti-racist groups said they would attend the counter-demonstration.

"There's no way that their demonstration will be able to go where they want to go. They won't be able to pass. The police have given them permission to march, but that doesn't mean people in the neighbourhood or anti-racist groups are giving them permission to march," he said.

The anti-Islam group had submitted its march itinerary to Montreal police. A number of officers were on the scene to keep an eye on any violence.

What is PEGIDA?

Police forces protect Salafists against protesters that show a banner that reads 'No Extremism' during a demonstration of Patriotic Europeans against the Islamization of the West, or PEGIDA, and Salafists in Wuppertal, Germany, Saturday, March 14, 2015. (Frank Augstein/The Associated Press)

The organization is popular withneo-Nazisand other nationalists and is often spoken about favourably on white supremacist online forums such asStormfrontand National Front.

PEGIDA, which in German stands forPatriotic Europeans Against theIslamizationof the West, first popped up in October 2014. Therelatively new group began in Dresden, Germanyand uses Facebook as a main organizing tool.

PEGIDAQubecfirst began posting on Facebookin January,shortly after the CharlieHebdoattack. Saturday afternoon's demonstration is referred to online as the local chapter's first action.

PEGIDAQubecleaderAsgardtold Radio-Canada that theitinerary planned for Saturday would have intentionally passedin front of several Muslim community centres and mosques.

Singh said it's very worrisome that people who normally only espouse racist and xenophobic opinions online are moving into the physical world.

"Neo-Nazis,Islamophobes, internet trolls they all sort of congregate around this thing calledPEGIDA," Singh said.

"Now we know there's racists out there, we know there'sIslamophobesout there, we know there's fascists out there, but what's different today is that they're trying tomarch publicly in a working class, immigrant area that is predominantly North African," he said.

Denis Coderre says extremists unwelcome

Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre said during the week that extremist groups like PEGIDA were not welcome in the city.

He reiterated that statement Saturday on Twitter:

Singh said earlier in the day that Coderre is smart to denounce PEGIDA, but that recent events in Montreal seem to show the city is not that friendly toward Muslims.

In recent months, zoning bylaws have been changed to prohibit religious organizations from certain parts of boroughs, and a new radicalization tip line was put in place after seven Montreal-area residents reportedly travelled to Syria to join jihadists.

"Islamophobia is being instrumentalized and is being used by various parts of the political class," Singh said.

"We have just a handful of folks who may or may not have gone to Syria and suddenly we need a special hotline on extremism, when this is a very marginal phenomenon," Singh continued. "This is being used to create a social crisis."

With files from Radio-Canada