Toronto, Ontario, Tuesday, May 13, 2003
[Picture added by this website]
Canadian rights
panel warned firm of hate literature
U.S. Internet giant pulls
Zündel's Web site
Adrian Humphreys National Post
A LARGE U.S. Internet service provider has
pulled the plug on Ernst Zündel's controversial Web
site after the Canadian Human Rights Commission warned the
site contained hate literature.
In a March 27 letter to the chief executive officer of
QWest Communications, a Denver-based company with 25 million
customers, the commission brought the Zündel site to the
Internet giant's attention.
"We have an acceptable
use policy and when the Canadian Human Rights Commission
brought to our attention that Mr. Zündel was publishing
hateful material we worked ... to see it was removed," said
Claire Maledon, spokeswoman for QWest.
QWest's policy prohibits distribution of material that is
hateful, obscene, abusive or excessively violent.
Daniel Lavoie, spokesman for the commission, said
Mr. Zündel's return to Canada in February after his
deportation from the United States revived the commission's
interest in the ruling that the Zündel site was spreading
material inciting hatred against Jews, a violation of the
Canadian Human Rights Act.
The site, however, re-emerged
yesterday on another U.S. host server.
Mr. Zündel is in detention in Canada pending a Federal
Court review of the government's declaration that he is a
threat to national security, an order requiring removal to his
native Germany.
He lived in Canada for decades, drawing criticism for his
Holocaust denial and for publishing the views of neo-Nazis and
white supremacists. Some of the material placed on the Zündel
site brought public complaints to the commission in 1996.
It sparked a lengthy case before the Canadian Human Rights
Tribunal. Hearings started on May 26, 1997, and ended on Feb.
28, 2001. A decision was rendered on Jan. 18, 2002.
By the time the decision was filed, Mr.
Zündel had left Canada for Tennessee and the Zündel site was
moved from a Canadian-based Internet server to one in the
United States.
Jewish groups were pleased the commission is aggressive in
enforcing the tribunal's ruling.
"It is important that all effective means be used against
any individual who would support or spread hate. The content
of the Web site he was found responsible for continues to
contain much of the original material," said Anita Bromberg,
in-house counsel for B'nai
Brith Canada, a group accepted as an interested party in
the original complaint against the site.
The actions of the commission drew the ire of Ingrid
Rimland, Mr. Zündel's wife, who called the tribunal that
ruled against her husband an "obscene, Marxist-flavoured
outfit."
In an e-mail to supporters, she said:
"An administrative Canadian body with no
enforcement powers of their own -- recently described by
Ernst as a 'hick tribunal' that had ruled that historical
truth not be allowed as a defense -- is telling an American
communications giant like QWest to 'cease and desist' -- or
have its employees face arrest at the northern border! And
the giant falls to his knees and gives in."
Ms. Rimland did not return phone calls yesterday.
Mr. Lavoie and Ms. Maledon said no such threat against
Qwest employees was ever made.
Meanwhile, Mr. Zündel's U.S. lawyer, Boyd W. Venable
III, who lived near Mr. Zündel and his wife in Pigeon
Forge, Tenn., said he was filing suit in U.S. court claiming
Mr. Zündel's deportation to Canada was illegal.
"Zündel had been living with his wife peaceably in
Tennessee for almost three years, awaiting immigration
processing. He posed a threat to no one," Mr. Venable said in
a written statement.
He said U.S. immigration authorities were sent written
notification by Mr. Zündel's immigration attorney of a need to
change a scheduled court appearance in Mr. Zündel's bid to be
granted status in the United States. Despite that, when Mr.
Zündel did not appear in court he was deemed to have abandoned
his claim and was immediately deported to Canada, Mr. Venable
said.
ahumphreys@nationalpost.com
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May 2, 2003: Ernst
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Zündel
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