Robin Philpot

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Robin Philpot (born in 1948) is a Quebec journalist and electoral candidate for the Parti Québécois.

Contents

[edit] Background

Originally from Thunder Bay, Ontario, where his father Roderick Philpot was an alderman of the city of Fort William, Philpot earned degrees in literature and history from the University of Toronto. After working in Africa, he established himself in Quebec in 1974. In 1999, he became director of communications for the Saint-Jean-Baptiste Society in Montreal.

[edit] Public profile

He is notable for having called into question the testimony of Roméo Dallaire on the Rwandan Genocide; his brother is the Montreal lawyer John Philpot, who represented Jean-Paul Akayesu and other defendants accused of genocide and crimes against humanity at the trials conducted by the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda.

Philpot is also notable for his role in attacking the former federal Liberal government over the Option Canada program, a promotional enterprise funded by the federal government intended to promote federalism in Quebec and counter the Quebec sovereignty movement.

[edit] Political career

Philpot was an unsuccessful candidate for the riding of Saint-Henri—Sainte-Anne in the 2007 Quebec general election, representing the Parti Québécois. During the campaign, certain of Philpot's remarks about the Rwandan Genocide from his book Rwanda 1994: Colonialism Dies Hard were widely republished and proved embarrassing to PQ leader André Boisclair.

These included the statement "In none of my writings have I denied that there were mass killings, some even of an ethnic character. However, I categorically reject the abusive use of the expression 'genocide,'". [1]

Philpot claims never to have denied the existence of the genocide, but has been criticized by researchers Pierre Trudel and Callixte Kabayiza for supporting the thesis of the double genocide.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Ha, Tu Thanh. "Boisclair under fire over candidate's genocide remark", Globe and Mail, 8 March 2007. Retrieved on 2007-03-08. 

[edit] External links

Languages