In a country like Pakistan, the word of a Muslim in a personal complaint against a kaffir is automatically received as truth and then results in various punishments and public alarm. It is the norm in such environments where reasoning and evidence are secondary to the Sharia, but such judgments are completely unacceptable in developed societies. Well, they should be. The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) reported a personal gripe by one Muslim woman against an infidel as a headline.

Zineb Benrochd was standing at a bus stop in broad daylight last week, wearing her niqab, when a bus whizzed right past her. The 23-year-old Montrealer wondered why. She says she looked the driver up online and discovered a trail of Islamophobic social media posts.

The CBC reporters are careful to include that “while the driver’s motivations are unclear”, but then they go on: “the incident occurred as Quebec politicians are set to vote on a proposed law that restricts where religious symbols can be worn in the province”, and that “Muslim women in the province have reported being the target of an increasing number of Islamophobic incidents since it was tabled in March.” Agenda alert.

No Western country should permit the oppressive niqab and burqa to begin with. It is a form of torture, even though one must remember that Muslim women are deemed to be superior to infidels under the sharia. The niqab and burqa are also a security risk. Sri Lanka, banned all face coverings “after police found several women suspected of having aided the Easter terror attacks were wearing burqas.” In Chad, two Boko Haram jihad suicide bomb attacks killed 23 people in 2015, which led to the country’s Prime Minister Kalzeube Pahimi Deubet condemning the use of the burqa as “camouflage,” and ruling that all burqas on sale in markets must be burned. So far, the burqa has been banned in China, Tajikistan, Morocco, Latvia, Cameroon, Congo-Brazzaville, Gabon, Chad, Austria, Denmark, Belgium, Netherlands, Bulgaria, France and Algeria which banned the burqa in the public sector.

As for Montreal’s Zineb Benrochd wielding the “islamophobia” victimology stick, and the CBC giving her valuable print space, it sets a worrying precedent. Could the bus driver have been discriminating? it is possible but not known. I and many others have witnessed (with concern) from time to time, a random bus driver zoom on past someone waiting at a bus stop. The worst is when it happens to a senior on a cold wintry day. It has happened to me in past, as well as many people I know and one cannot immediately assume a driver’s intent, even in this particular case given the driver’s alleged past sentiments about Muslims as reported by Benrochd. The service industry is full of people who may be having out-to-lunch days but only Muslims screaming “Islamophobia” can actually make a CBC national news headline attaching “discrimination” to a bus zooming past a potential passenger. Note how Benrochd proceeded to terrorize the bus driver, calling a friend to help track her down and when Benrochd claims to have finally caught up to the driver, she proceeds to wave her down, corner her, confront her, film her, alarm her and then “files complaints with the Montreal police hate crimes unit and Quebec’s human rights commission“. Dizzying.

It isn’t only front line activists and writers that will face the wrath of supremacist Muslims. The latter is becoming more emboldened and will increasingly attack members of the public in various forms.

A union representative with STM bus drivers was quoted as saying in a post directed at Benrochd: “A normal Quebecer would have waited for another bus.” The message of woe be unto any dhimmi that offends an Islamic supremacist, is unfortunately being supported by many in the mainstream media, the latter of whom will not escape the same woe, as Islamic supremacists become emboldened.

The traumatized bus driver or The Société de transport de Montréal, may well publicly apologize as a next step, to calm the fire and avoid the company being labelled “Islamophobic“. Benrochd has served to provide further ample reason to ban the burqa and niqab in public places.

“Montreal woman says STM bus driver didn’t stop for her because of her niqab”, by Verity Stevenson & Jonathan Montpetit, CBC News, June 11, 2019: