Tuesday, May 11, 2021

Criminal complaint filed after 2nd Nazi flag spotted in rural Alberta

Janice Johnston
CBC

© Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center Hitler Youth and Confederate flags fly on a property outside Breton in Brazeau County, Alta.

A woman living in central Alberta says she nearly crashed her vehicle when she saw a Nazi flag and Confederate flag flying side-by-side at a rural property.

For at least the past five years, a rural property owner who lives outside of Breton, southwest of Edmonton, has displayed a Confederate flag at the entrance. On May 1, he added a Hitler Youth Nazi flag on the other side of his driveway.

When a neighbour drove past his property on Mother's Day, she said she couldn't believe her eyes, so she took a photo.

CBC News has agreed to protect her identity.

"I nearly drove off the road," she said. "It shocked me because that's not the community. That's why I lost my biscuit and started contacting people."

She said she called the local RCMP detachment, Brazeau County and the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies(FSWC) in Toronto.

The FSWC contacted RCMP immediately and filed a criminal complaint.

RCMP said officers went to the property the same day and confirmed the existence of the flags. An RCMP spokesperson said they asked the landowner to take the flags down and he refused.

"Unfortunately, it doesn't surprise me," Jaime Kirzner-Roberts with FSWC said. "I think you can imagine that anybody that's motivated to put up a Confederate or a Nazi flag has some kind of agenda."

Const. Chantelle Kelly told CBC news that flying a flag is not in itself a criminal offence.

Investigators are now trying to determine if flying those particular flags is enough to be charged with wilfully promoting hatred or inciting the public.

She said RCMP would likely consult with the Crown to see if there's the necessary intent to file hate crime criminal charges. She was not able to provide a timeline on how long it would take to make a decision.

The FSWC is encouraging RCMP to lay criminal charges.

"These symbols are promoting hatred," Kirzner-Roberts said. "Here in Canada, the wilful promotion of hatred is illegal. It is a criminal act."
Politician calls for removal of flags

The reeve of Brazeau County said he doesn't know the homeowner, but hopes he'll decide to take down the flags he described as disturbing.

"There's no time for this type of symbol of hatred and racism to be displayed anywhere, let alone in Brazeau County," Bart Guyon said. "People are pretty stressed these days from all the different things going on and the last thing we need is one more thing to worry about."

Last week, a Hitler Youth flag was also spotted on a flagpole south of Boyle. That property owner agreed to take it down when asked to do so by RCMP.

The woman who blew the whistle on the flags flying outside Breton hopes the property owner will have a change of heart.

"I hope there's enough pressure that it makes it uncomfortable for him," she said.

The whole incident has made the Brazeau County Reeve very uncomfortable.

"The world is changing," Guyon said. "I hope this isn't the direction it's going."

'It is extremely disturbing': Nazi flag seen flying on second rural Alberta property in a week

Jonny Wakefield
EDMONTON JOURNAL

A Hitler Youth flag has been spotted flying over a second rural Alberta property in the span of a week.

The Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies says it was alerted Sunday to a Nazi and a Confederate flag on a property near Breton, Alta.

On Tuesday, the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies (FSWC) said they contacted police after learning Nazi and Confederate flags were on display at a property near Breton.

A nearby resident spotted the flags Sunday and reported them to the Toronto-based centre, which monitors racism and antisemitism.

In a news release, the FSWC said the property owner refused to remove the flags after being approached by Breton RCMP. An RCMP spokesman confirmed they are investigating but declined to provide further details.

“It is extremely disturbing and quite disheartening to once again see a Hitler Youth flag, as well as the Confederate flag, on display,” said Jaime Kirzner-Roberts, the centre’s director of policy.

“These displays of hate go against the values that Canada stands for and are an attack on not only the Jewish and Black communities, but also on our veterans and fallen soldiers who made unspeakable sacrifices to defeat the Nazis and preserve our freedoms.”

The news comes less than a week after RCMP asked a property owner near the northern Alberta village of Boyle to remove a similar flag. The latest property is located on Township Road 484 in Brazeau County, southwest of Edmonton.

The FSWC filed criminal complaints in relation to both flags, arguing the property owners are wilfully promoting hatred and demanding police conduct a hate crimes investigation.

County Reeve Bart Guyon called the flags “disturbing” in a phone interview Tuesday.

In a followup statement, he added: “There is no place in Brazeau County for symbols of hatred and racism. These flags are disturbing, inappropriate, and do not represent the values of the people of Brazeau County. We call upon the landowner to remove them immediately.”

Breton’s chief administrative officer said the property is not within the boundaries of the village, which she noted was founded by Black settlers and features a museum with one of the few exhibits on Black settlement in Alberta .

Steve Shafir, president of the Jewish Federation of Edmonton, said the flags are proof that “antisemitism, unfortunately, is alive and well in Canada.”

“It’s disgusting,” he said. “It’s disconcerting, and it is downright scary.”

Shafir added the Jewish community has been “pleased with the outpouring of support from the general community when these things do come to light.”

“We know that the vast majority of Canadians are disgusted with the views that come with a symbol like that.”

Efforts to contact the property owner have been unsucc

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