Man accused of promoting hate claims he's victim of police persecution - Action News
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British Columbia

Man accused of promoting hate claims he's victim of police persecution

A B.C. man charged with promoting hatred against a Congolese ethnic group claims he is the victim of police persecution. But RCMP say it's their job to prevent Canada from being used as a safe haven for people to launch attacks on minorities.

RCMP say arrest is part of war crimes unit's role preventing Canada from being used as safe haven for hate

Kibwe Ngoie-Ntombe is charged with the wilful promotion of hate in relation to videos he posted online about a Congolese ethnic group. He claims he is innocent. (YouTube)

A B.C. man charged withpromoting hate against a Congolese ethnic group after an investigation by Canada's war crimes program claims he is the victim of police persecution.

RCMP announced the rare charge againstKibweNgoie-Ntombethis week, nearly a year after they first arrested him and searched his Kelowna home in relation to a series of online videos attacking people he identified as Kasaianin the mining-rich province of Katanga.

Reached at his home Friday, the 52-year-old who is originally from the Democratic Republic of Congo claims he was exercising his rightto free speech on an issue that has nothing to do with Canada.

"My wife, she's Canadian, we have six children who are born here. The police, they came to my place, they took everything from us in the middle of the pandemic. They took even our six children's passports, they took the birth certificates. Canada abused me,"Ngoie-Ntombesaid.

"There's not freedom of speech in Canada. You cannot say what you want to say."

Canada not a launching pad for hate

In February,Ngoie-Ntombewas charged with uttering threats, having a forged U.S. social security document and counselling people to commit aggravated assault and arson.

The wilful promotion of hate charge required a sign-off from B.C. Attorney General David Eby.

Ngoie-Ntombemakes his next appearance in Kelowna provincial court on Tuesday.

Many of Kibwe Ngoie-Ntombe's videos remain online. The Kelowna man is accused of the wilful promotion of hate against a Congolese ethnic group. (YouTube)

His claim tofree speech places him at oddswithpolice, who say one of the central functions of the war crimes programis to ensure Canada can't beused as a safe haven for people to launch hateful tirades that might inspire attacksagainst marginalized peoplein other parts of the globe.

The program includes the Department of Justice, the RCMP, the Canada Border Services Agency, as well asImmigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada.

National Division RCMP Insp. Francois Courtemanchesays the investigation intoNgoie-Ntombebegan with a complaint to the Department of Justice, which determined that a criminal investigation was warranted.

Courtemanche wouldn't speak to the specifics of the case because of a bail-hearing publication ban.

"We're looking to ensure that Canada is not used as a launching point to distribute these messages of hate and to promote violence against marginalized ethnic groups, whether they be here in Canada or in other locations around the world," he said.

"We want to prevent individuals from being able to sit in their home, or in their basement, or even in the public library using the internet, and spreading messages of hate or using Canada or Canadian funds to be able to fund organizations that are attacking marginalized people."

A history rooted in colonialism

The terms of Ngoie-Ntombe's bail conditions limit his use of the internetand limit him to a cellphone that can only receive and make calls. He's allowed to use one laptop, but can't delete his browser history.

Ngoie-Ntombeis also forbidden from communicating with any members of the Katanga Independence Movement through social media, instant messaging services or chat rooms.

United Nations peacekeepers in the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2013. Ethnic tensions in the country date back to colonial rule by Belgium. ((Jerome Delay/Associated Press))

Simon Fraser University assistant professor Jason Stearns, who heads New York University'sCongo Research Group, says thepeopleNgoie-Ntombeis accused of targetingare more accuratelyknown as the Luba.

He says the Lubabecame prominent inthe Belgian colonial administration. Many migratedto the mining hub in the southern part ofCongo, which was known as the Katanga region.

Stearns said tensions between the Luba and other communities boiled over in the years following the Democratic Republic ofCongo's independence in 1960, coming to a head in the 1990s with conflicts that resulted in serious human rights abuses.

"This expressed itself as a conflict between people who considered themselves to be indigenous to the mining-rich Katanga region and the Luba people who they say were outsiders, even though the Lubahad in some cases been there for several or many generations," Stearns says.

Stearns says the types of videosNgoie-Ntombeis accused of making circulate in the area from time to time, particularly during elections, when candidates stir up ethnic tensions to gain votes.

Accused claims he actedin 'self-defence'

Many of Ngoie-Ntombe's videos remain on YouTube and Facebook, wherehe calledhimself Kibwe Katanga President.

Heuses degrading terms in the videos to describe "Kasaians" and also calls for them "to go back home."

In an interview,Ngoie-Ntombecast his actions as "self-defence" and said he was acting to prevent genocide.

A singer and entrepreneur,Ngoie-Ntombesays he has lived in Canada for 15 years and is married to a Canadian citizen, but has been denied residency several times.

He says he was granted asylum in Australia in the years before he cameto Canada and would like to return to that country with his family now.

Ngoie-Ntombe claims there is no proof his videos have resulted in anyone being harmed.

Courtemanche said the RCMP's domestic investigators worked with liaison officers in the U.S., South Africa and Kenya, as well as with the Australian Federal Police.

None of the charges have been proven in court.

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of. You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)