Liberal, Green MPs probe universities' free speech policies as Israel-Hamas war grinds on - Action News
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Politics

Liberal, Green MPs probe universities' free speech policies as Israel-Hamas war grinds on

As the conflict in the Middle East rages on, 13 Liberal and Green MPs are asking 27 Canadian universities to explain how they are protecting faculty and staff from blowback over advocacy for Palestinians or Israelis.

Letter follows months of academic dispute, disciplinary measures

An overhead shot of a large crowd of people.
Faculty, staff and students at Toronto's York University walk out of class on Tuesday, Nov. 28, 2023. Attendees rallied in support of York activists put on administrative leave by York University for allegedly being involved in an incident where posters criticizing the CEO of Chapters Indigo, Heather Reisman, over her financial support for volunteers with the Israel Defense Forces were stuck on the windows of an Indigo bookstore. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

As the conflict in the Middle East rages on, 13 Liberal and Green MPs are asking 27 Canadian universities to explain how they're protecting faculty, staff and students from blowback over advocacy for Palestinians or Israelis.

"We have seen a rise in antisemitism, anti-Arab discrimination, anti-Palestinian discrimination and Islamophobia," said Liberal MP for Brampton-Centre Shafqat Ali, who initiated the letter. It was sent to the universities on February 4.

"We thought we should have a conversation with university presidents about how they're dealing with this situation."

Ali was one of the five MPs who travelled to the Occupied West Bank and Jordanrecently to hear from Palestinians suffering because of the conflict, and from the non-governmental organizations working to helpthem.

The other MPs who signed the letter are largely Liberals, although the two Green Party MPsalso added their names to the document.

Letter protests 'vilification' of Palestinians

While the letter does not cite any specific incidents, it does ask about steps taken to prevent eruptions of intolerance on campus.

"Unfortunately," the MPs say in the letter, "dehumanization and vilification of the Palestinian people, and stigmatization of those advocating for their legitimate aspirations, arecommonplace. While not occurring within the university settling alone, students, faculty and staff are being directly impacted in significant ways."

The MPssay they've heard multiple complaints about students or faculty"being profiled, reprimanded, and, in some cases, disciplined" for speaking out about the conflict. They say they've heard ofmedical and law students "losing their employment or placements for their views and opinions on the Middle East conflict."

A man holding a green folder speaks in the House of Commons.
Liberal MP for Brampton Centre Shafqat Ali in the House of Commons. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

In the letter, the MPsask the universities what they're doing to protect academic freedom and freedom of expression andsupport students and faculty who are "uncomfortable, upset or offended" by the debate, and if they are committing to engaging with student groups and unions.

"As a society, we seem to be operating with a hair trigger. We get angry before we think, and one place that shouldn't happen is on our university campuses," Green Party Leader Elizabeth May told CBC News.

"That is a place for critical thinking. That's a place for free exchange of ideas. And obviously it's been more pronounced, perhaps in the United States than Canada, but there's a lot of frayed tempers and emotions "

The war's impact on Canadian universities

The war's effects on students and faculty are being felt at post-secondary institutionsacross the country.

In October, York University pushed back against three differentstudent unions after they issued a joint statement on the Israel-Hamaswar voicing solidarity with Palestinians in their struggle against "settler colonialism, apartheid and genocide."

The university threatened to withdraw recognition from the student organizations, which could have ended their access to physical space on campus, student levies and other financial aid, and to university-hosted email addresses andwebsites.

WATCH: Universities navigate tensions over Israel-Hamas war

Canadian campuses navigate Israel-Hamas war tensions

11 months ago
Duration 5:36
Protests and student union statements about the Israel-Hamas war are creating tensions on Canadian campuses and raising questions about how universities manage free expression.

That same month, Jewish students at Western University spoke out after two young men ripped posters of Israeli hostages off a wall on campus and tossed them in the garbage. The incident was captured on video.

And in November, the University of Ottawa came in for criticism when it suspended a medical resident, Dr. Yipeng Ge, over his social media posts supporting Palestinians. In those posts, Ge referred to the Palestinian experience as one of "apartheid" and "settler colonialism."

A petition to reinstate him gathered 65,000 signatures. Ge said last month that the university had offered him his position back, but he declined.

A portrait of a man
Dr. Yipeng Ge was suspended in November 2023 after publishing a series of pro-Palestinian social media posts. (Twitter)

Gewelcomed the MPs'letter and said it could help starta long-overdue conversation on campus.

"I think the contents of this letter and what these members of Parliament are calling for is really important. I am disappointed that it has come in February and [not]earlier," he said, adding that the largenumber of incidents over the past few months probably explains the timing.

He said he might have avoided suspension had the letter come out sooner.

"I don't think it's proper for schools to take sides with anybody," said Paul Chiang,Liberal MP for Markham-Unionvilleandparliamentary secretary to Immigration Minister Marc Miller. He also signed the letter. "They should be free for all to express their personal views."

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In December, five Liberal MPs wrote a letter to universities asking if calls forgenocide against Jews or the eradication of Israel violatetheir academic codes of conduct. In January, Anthony Housefather, one of those five MPs, tweeted that the universities all replied that such calls for the extermination of Jews or the elimination of Israel do violate those codes of conduct.

The authors of this letter have given the universities until February 26to respond, and say their answers may be tabled in House of Commons proceedings.