Toronto, Monday, August 30, 1999
http://www.globeandmail.ca/gam/National/19990830/UWEBBN.html Far
Right using Web to whip up hostility to
Chinese migrants Internet
the latest tool to promote campaign
against immigration JOHN GRAY The Globe and
Mail THE recent arrival of
two boatloads of illegal Chinese migrants
on the West Coast has provided fresh fuel
for the long-standing anti-immigration
campaign that inspires Canada's small but
noisy far right. Since the first boat arrived on
Vancouver Island from China last month
with a cargo of 123 illegal migrants, the
far right has been agitating to send them
back without delay. The Canada
First Immigration Reform Committee has
harnessed the Internet to carry its
campaign against immigration in general
and the two recent boatloads of Chinese
migrants in particular. The Internet
campaign has involved a subtle
combination of straightforward stories
reprinted from news organizations, such
as
The
Globe and Mail,
and anonymous commentaries from those
sympathetic to the anti-immigration
campaign. The committee is promoting lobbying
devices ranging from an E-mail petition to
postcards and faxes to Immigration
Minister Elinor Caplan and members
of Parliament. The
petition has attracted the support of many
of the traditional figures of the far
right: Terry Long, former leader of
the Aryan Nation; Wolfgang Droege,
leader of the Heritage Front, and Gerry
Lincoln, a founder of the Heritage
Front. The man leading the campaign is Paul
Fromm (right), the director of the
committee and a prominent fixture of just
about every far-right cause in Canada
since he was leader of the defunct Edmund
Burke Society three decades ago. Mr. Fromm was particularly delighted
with more than 100 E-mail messages of
support he received in the 24 hours after
conservative columnist Diane
Francis allied herself with the
campaign to send the migrants back to
China immediately. "A lot of people are very, very upset
about this issue," he said in a telephone
interview from Costa Rica, where he is on
holiday. Harry
Abrams, the B.C. representative of
B'Nai Brith, who has tracked the recent
anti-immigrant campaign, said the issue
of the boatloads of illegals is being
used to piggyback a broader xenophobic
campaign by Mr. Fromm and
others. But he acknowledged that the issue is
not far from the surface of the Canadian
consciousness and the reaction in recent
weeks has shown that emotions can be
whipped up quickly. The anti-immigration thesis of Mr.
Fromm and his supporters is that in 1967
the Canadian government changed the source
of immigration from Britain and Europe to
the Third World. He describes that change as
undemocratic and believes that most
Canadians are alienated from the
immigration process. Mr. Fromm says 90 per
cent of Canadians want the recent
boatloads of illegal immigrants sent back
to China. "Canadians do not want the type
of immigrants we've been getting," he
said. "What part of 90 don't they
understand?" If the essentials of the anti-immigrant
message have not changed in the past three
decades, the means of delivering the
message have kept up with the times. Anyone interested in news
stories depicting immigrants and
immigration in an unflattering
light can find them on Mr.
Fromm's Website. In addition to Mr. Fromm, the
hero of the Web site is B.C.
columnist Doug Collins,
who is perhaps best known for
columns discounting the Holocaust
that made him an icon of the far
right. The B.C. Human Rights Tribunal
ruled last February that Mr.
Collins had violated the
province's antihate laws in a
column that described the film
Schindler's
List, about the Holocaust,
as Jewish propaganda. | Hear
Doug
Collins
at the Real History convention
1999 in Cincinnati.
[Details] |
Until the furor over the Chinese
migrants, Mr. Fromm's most visible recent
activity was in connection with a "free
speech" seminar organized to take place in
the B.C. town of Oliver in March of last
year. The conference was organized by
Bernard Klatt -- another signatory
of the latest petition-- whose Internet
server provided an outlet for groups
ranging from the U.S. Nazi party, the
Charlemagne Hammer Skins and other white
supremacists. The conference was cancelled
after public protests. Until two years ago, Mr. Fromm, 50, was
a teacher in Mississauga. He was fired by
the Peel regional school board for
attending white-supremacist rallies. He is
challenging the dismissal. |