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Canadian media: Azerbaijani flag stolen from diaspora hub in Toronto

16 October 2025 10:59

A newly purchased Azerbaijan national flag was stolen from the front of the Azerbaijan House in Toronto in late July, the community centre said, an incident the organisation called a clear hate crime and reported to the Toronto Police Service.

Azerbaijan House said the theft and accompanying vandalism occurred shortly after the group posted online about the recent Azerbaijan-Armenia peace process, Caliber.Az reports via the Canadian website Thej.ca.

The organisation said the timing suggested the theft was politically motivated and urged witnesses to contact the police.

The centre said it had filed a police report and asked anyone with information or video footage of the incident to come forward to investigators. The community group described the theft as a targeted act that harmed the local Azerbaijani diaspora and threatened civic safety.

Toronto has seen heightened tensions in recent months around issues tied to international conflicts. The city’s police service has in the past launched hate crime probes into incidents involving flags, graffiti, and protest conduct, underscoring the force’s growing attention to incidents perceived as motivated by bias.

Community leaders and observers said the Azerbaijan House theft cannot be viewed in isolation. Azerbaijan and Israel maintain robust strategic and economic ties, including energy and defense cooperation, which have drawn attention from across Canada’s Jewish and pro-Israel communities. Those links mean acts against Azerbaijani institutions sometimes raise concern among pro-Israel groups that anti-Israel actors could be involved or sympathetic.

The theft adds to a pattern of incidents affecting the Azerbaijan House in Canada. Local reports and diaspora outlets have described earlier episodes of provocation or vandalism at the Toronto centre, often tied to regional tensions between Azerbaijan and Armenia.  

Azerbaijani community advocates in Toronto said stolen national symbols harm local cohesion and intimidate minorities. They urged municipal leaders and law enforcement to treat the theft seriously and to increase protections for community institutions that host cultural and civic events. The advocates also encouraged residents to preserve any surveillance footage that might help identify suspects.

Toronto police did not immediately release a public statement specific to the Azerbaijan House incident. In similar cases involving national symbols or inflammatory imagery, police have sometimes classified investigations as hate-motivated when there is evidence that the offence was motivated by bias. Authorities request that anyone with relevant video, photographs, or witness information contact their local division.

Given Azerbaijan’s strategic relationship with Israel and the prominence of both Azerbaijani and Armenian diasporas in the city, local leaders said community safety requires swift, transparent policing and public condemnation of bias-driven crimes.

Azerbaijan House reiterated its appeal for information and thanked neighbours for their expressions of support. The organisation said it has ordered new flags and will work with police and community partners to bolster site security and to ensure the centre remains a safe venue for cultural events and civic engagement.

Caliber.Az
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