Online harms: Civil liberty, law critics say stiffer hate crime sentences ‘troubling’
OTTAWA — The Canadian Civil Liberties Association is voicing concerns over what it calls “draconian penalties” proposed in the Criminal Code as part of the Liberal government’s sweeping plan to target online hate.
Justice Minister Arif Virani tabled the long-awaited bill this week, which includes introducing stiffer penalties for hate offences.
The bill proposes increasing the maximum punishment for advocating genocide to life imprisonment, and allowing for up to five years in prison for other hate propaganda offences.
The national civil liberties group says higher sentences risk chilling free speech and also undermine “the principles of proportionality and fairness” within the legal system.