Anti-Islamophobia representative Amira Elghawaby says she'll continue to call out discriminatory laws

By
1 Min Read
- Advertisement -
Ad image

A few weeks after apologizing for comments in a 2019 opinion piece, Canada’s anti-Islamophobia representative began an official tour of communities with a stop in London, Ont., where a Muslim family was killed in June 2021 in what police describe as a hate-motivated attack.

“The call for the creation of a special office to combat Islamophobia came from Muslim communities across Canada, but most strongly from London Muslim communities,” Amira Elghawaby said in an interview with London Morning‘s Rebecca Zandbergen on Monday after her weekend stop.

“I knew that I had to come to London.”

Elghawaby started her post as the country’s first representative to combat Islamophobia amid controversy

- Advertisement -
Share This Article
Follow:
WNews is a digital and print newsroom committed to investigative, balanced, and honest journalism. Our team covers breaking news, politics, global affairs, community stories, and in-depth investigations across Canada, the United States, and around the world. From frontline reporting to long-form analysis, WNews delivers coverage that prioritizes truth, accuracy, and transparency. Our mission is simple: bring news back to news and restore trust in a time when it matters most. Follow our latest reports at W.News and across all WNews platforms.
- Advertisement -
Ad image
Leave a Comment
Report a Error with this Story

Notice a error or facts with this story, please submit the information below and someone from our newsroom will review it and change if required 

Reading: Anti-Islamophobia representative Amira Elghawaby says she'll continue to call out discriminatory laws

(C) 2012 – 2024  | WNews Broadcasting Corp, a W-World Company | All Rights Reserved

Connect
with Us