Re: "How ethno-politics poisons democracy" -National Post 31. August 2007
   
  The below mentioned groups are the most active in Canadian life! In spite of 
asking and applying Serbs were not able to get money for the Nikola Tesla 
Memorial in Niagara Falls - the most beautiful monument to one of the greatest 
scientists. Shame on the Ontario government!!! 
   
  http://www.teslasociety.com/victoria.htm
  You too can contribute to this wonderful project by sending your donation to:
   
  
  The Tesla Memorial Fund
  St. George Serbian Orthodox Church
                                                6085 Montrose Road, Niagara 
Falls
                                                             ON, L2H 1L4, Canada
   
  Serbs- Unite!
  Boba Borojevic
  30 Walgate Ave
  Ottawa, ON, K2E 6M2
  ========
   
  .. " "In essence, the decisions behind 'who got what' were often based on 
conversations, not applications," Mr. McCarter concluded..."
   
   
  
http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/editorialsletters/story.html?id=aa8cdd2c-8f77-4c5d-9544-c69b5412bfb9
   
  How ethno-politics poisons democracy
  Naresh Raghubeer, National Post  Published: Tuesday, July 31, 2007
   
  Last week, Ontario Auditor-General Jim McCarter reported that the province's 
Immigration and Citizenship Ministry has been dispensing millions of dollars in 
grants to ethnic groups under a process that is "not open, transparent or 
accountable." In many cases, groups got money simply because their members were 
chummy with ministry insiders. "In essence, the decisions behind 'who got what' 
were often based on conversations, not applications," Mr. McCarter concluded.
   
  But Mr. McCarter's report does not merely highlight a failure of process in 
an otherwise sound government disbursement program. What the Auditor-General 
documents is nothing less than a taxpayer-funded political black market based 
on "ethnic" and religious vote-buying.
   
  Dalton McGuinty's government marked the 2006 and 2007 fiscal year-end by 
rushing $32.5-million dollars out the treasury's door. Destination: cultural 
and religious groups likely to vote Liberal in the coming October elections.
  
  The Ontario Khalsa Darbar Dixie Gurdwara received money from the McGuinty 
government despite a court battle over the alleged mismanagement of funds.  
Peter Redman, National Post  2007 grant recipients included: - Islamic 
Institute of Toronto ($500,000) - St. George Arab Cultural Centre ($300,000) - 
Bengali Community Centre ($250,000) - Armenian Community Centre ($500,000) - 
Six Sikh temples ($750,000) - Chinese Professional Association ($250,000 ) - 
Museum of Hindu Civilization ($200,000) - Sri Sathya Sai Baba Centre of 
Toronto, ($250,000) - United Jewish Appeal ($15 million)
   
  Most astonishingly, the McGuinty government also threw a million dollar grant 
at the Ontario Cricket Association -- a sum that was $850,000 more than the 
Association itself had requested. The Iranian-Canadian Community Centre's 
$200,000 grant was disbursed despite there being "no written request for 
funding." In some cases, the spectre of a political quid pro quo was overt: The 
$250,000 that went to the Chinese Professional Association of Canada (CPAC) was 
delivered just a few months after 10 CPAC board members attended a fundraiser 
for the Minister of Immigration and Citizenship, Mike Colle (who has since 
resigned). A CPAC board member also worked in the Minister's office. 
   
  Small world.
   
  Awestruck Sikhs beheld $250,000 landing in a temple that was embroiled in a 
court battle over the alleged mismanagement of funds. Meanwhile, two grants of 
$100,000 each went to Sikh gurdwaras in Malton and Rexdale, where certain Sikh 
devotees promote the Khalistan movement and push to break up India. Photos of 
Sikh "martyrs" cover the Malton Gurdwara's walls. Even an image of Talwinder 
Singh Parmar is posted there, despite his masterminding 329 murders --including 
280 Canadians and 136 children -- in the 1985 Air India bombing, the worst 
terrorist attack in this nation's history. It is the equivalent of funding a 
mosque that venerates Osama bin Laden.
   
  The quest for votes means politicians are less willing to differentiate 
between moderates and extremists: Whoever is seen to control the microphone at 
the local temple -- and is therefore in a position to guide voting decisions -- 
gets the cash. Hence, federal and provincial politicians now shamelessly attend 
Sikh and Tamil events where terrorists are glorified. The same phenomenon may 
well explain why Liberal leader Stephane Dion had his party vote down crucial 
expiring provisions of the Anti-Terrorism Act, a law introduced by his own 
party in 2001. This placated the Muslim and Sikh supporters who helped him win 
the Liberal leadership. They know the Act's demise will help scuttle the RCMP's 
last chance to definitively fix guilt in the Sikh terrorist plot against Air 
India Flight 182, and thereby deny any sense of closure to the families of the 
murdered victims.
   
  Canada's federal Conservatives can't resist, either, it seems. Last October, 
Mr. Harper turned over $30-million and Ottawa's venerable old War Museum 
building to establish the Centre for Global Pluralism. The Centre is to be 
captained by the Aga Khan, the spiritual leader of 15 million Shia Ismaili 
Muslims. How will our government react when much larger religious groups, such 
as Sunni Muslims, Hindus, Sikhs, Jews or Christians show up, wanting to 
establish similar international centres? 
   
  [Boba's remark - ...Or, want an "independent state"?]
   
  Meanwhile, back in Ontario, how have things gone since former citizen and 
immigration minister Mike Colle fell on his sword? In response to aggressive 
lobbying by Muslim and Jewish community members, Conservative Leader John Tory 
is promising $400-million to religious schools -- with the hope that religious 
votes will carry him to Ontario's premiership in October.
  Whose interest is served when politicians play vote-bank politics with 
Canadian tax dollars? We risk importing into Canada the tribal politics that 
afflict the countries from which many of our immigrants have fled.
   
  We also risk melding the realms of state and religion. This is a mixture that 
apparently appalls "progressive" Canadians when the religion at issue is 
Christianity. Why should the phenomenon be any less pernicious when the faith 
is Islam, Hinduism, Judaism or Sikhism?
   
  Mr. McCarter's report is a warning that should be heeded not only in Ontario, 
but all across Canada. Canadians are justly proud to live in a country where 
people can practice their privately held faiths freely. The private sphere is 
where such matters should remain: Publicly funded programs that subsidize 
religious and ethnic groups may benefit a handful of well-connected 
organizations. But our democracy as a whole becomes impoverished in the 
process. - Naresh Raghubeer is executive director with the Canadian Coalition 
for Democracies, a non-partisan, multi-ethnic, multi-religious organization of 
concerned Canadians dedicated to human rights, national security and the 
promotion of democracy.
   
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  © National Post 2007

Boba Borojevic
  [Е-ПОШТА 
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  http://serbianna.com/columns/borojevic/
  http://f2.pg.briefcase.yahoo.com/pertep
    (613) 852-1971 
   


       
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