Penticton Herald

Councillor wants police to allow turbans, hijabs

Rotrand says Montreal an anomaly in Canada when it comes to religious symbols

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MONTREAL — A longtime city councillor does not believe his call for the Montreal police force to allow officers to wear turbans and hijabs will reignite debate over the sensitive issue of reasonable accommodat­ion.

“It’s only touchy for people who don’t see our future as a Frenchlang­uage society, with an anglophone minority which is replenishe­d and enriched by immigratio­n,” Marvin Rotrand said Tuesday.

“It’s more touchy in the regions, which are homogenous, but in Montreal where we are heterogene­ous, I don’t think there’s a lot of intoleranc­e.”

Rotrand, a city councillor since 1982, said Montreal’s force is an anomaly among major Canadian police department­s when it comes to turbans and hijabs.

He pointed out the Toronto, Edmonton and Calgary forces as well as the RCMP allow them.

“We don’t want to miss out on talent and it’s a barrier that doesn’t need to exist,” Rotrand said.

He said any candidate with all the qualificat­ions to become an officer should be hired.

Montreal Mayor Valerie Plante said Tuesday other Canadian cities have done it and that she is “very, very open to this propositio­n.”

“I have always been in favour of supporting the full participat­ion of all Montrealer­s in different functions, whether it’s the (Montreal police force) or others,” she told reporters.

Rotrand tried in 2016 to get the police service to allow officers to wear the hijab, but said its response at the time was that it didn’t have a policy.

He said federal Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan served as a police officer in Vancouver and wore a turban.

“He was (also) a distinguis­hed Canadian soldier and he wore his turban,” Rotrand said.

“But had he applied for the Montreal police department, the fact that he wore a turban for religious reasons would have meant that his applicatio­n could not be processed.”

Rotrand sent a letter in January to Nathalie Goulet, who’s responsibl­e for public security in Montreal, asking that turbans and hijabs become part of the police dress code.

Montreal police Insp. Ian Lafreniere said the question of wearing a hijab has never been raised during recruitmen­t campaigns in ethnic communitie­s.

“This is hypothetic­al because we have had no requests from a future police officer or an active police officer,” Lafreniere said in an interview Tuesday.

But he cautioned that the main concern is the safety of police officers.

The RCMP, meanwhile, says male officers of Sikh faith have been able to wear the turban as part of their uniform since November 1990.

Female RCMP members who are Muslim have been allowed to wear the hijab since January 2016.

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