Canadian police label attack against Muslim women ‘hate crime’
'Terrifying' incident leaves mother, daughter 'shaken but unbroken'

TRENTON, Canada
Police in Ontario, Canada arrested a man Tuesday who almost hit a Muslim mother and daughter with his vehicle, then chased and threatened to kill them.
The mother, 62, and daughter, 26, were walking through a parking lot in the city of Hamilton, west of Toronto, when a vehicle almost slammed into one of them, police said. Both were wearing hijabs and were the target of racial slurs.
The pair ran across the street and hid in some bushes as the 40-year-old suspect began a search, calling out that if he was able to find them, he would kill them, police said.
One screamed and ran for help, and bystanders intervened and the suspect got into his vehicle and drove away, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) reported. The suspect was arrested, but details were not provided by police.
I’m deeply disturbed by reports of an Islamophobic attack on Muslim women in Hamilton yesterday - and I strongly condemn this violent, hateful, and abhorrent behaviour. It has no place in our country or any of our communities. We will continue to stand together and take action.
— Justin Trudeau (@JustinTrudeau) July 13, 2021
The National Council of Canadian Muslims told the CBC that it had received a statement from the family.
"We are shaken but unbroken after the attack on our family," the statement said. "Let us be clear: this individual attempted to terrorize our family."
The incident was also frightening, coming as it did after the recent murder of four members of a Muslim family deliberately run down by a vehicle in London, Ontario, a city about 80 miles west of Hamilton. Police said that crime was motivated by religious hate.
"In light of the London attack, this is incredibly terrifying for our family," the statement said. "Enough is enough. The government must commit to taking stronger action. Our family could have been seriously hurt -- and we cannot allow these things to keep happening."
Following the London killings, the federal government said it would convene an emergency summit on Islamophobia on July 22.
Police are investigating the Hamilton incident as a hate crime, and the suspect faces charges for assault with a weapon, dangerous operation of a motor vehicle and uttering death threats, the CBC reported.
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