The News (New Glasgow)

Muslim cabbies say they face discrimina­tion

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During a break from picking up passengers outside Quebec City’s airport, Karim removes a piece of cardboard hanging on the wall of the trailer and places it on the ground, he stands on it, and begins evening prayers.

Across the small, narrow trailer the television is broadcasti­ng Thursday’s funeral service in Montreal held for three of the six men murdered in a mosque across town.

Taxi drivers such as Karim, 53, who didn’t want to use his last name, are thankful for the outpouring of warmth towards the Muslim community from people across the city since last weekend’s shootings.

But he and his colleagues at the airport taxi stand - many of whom hail from French-speaking North Africa - can’t help but feel frustratio­n at the society they feel hasn’t fully accepted them, especially in the job market.

Karim, who came to Quebec from Morocco in 1991, completed a master’s at Laval University in 1996 in management.

“I sent hundreds of resumes,” he said, about his job search after graduating. “I got two interviews.”

Earlier in the week, the vicepresid­ent of Quebec City’s mosque, Mohamed Labidi, stood sobbing over the dried blood of his friend Azzeddine Soufiane, whom he said tried in vain to stop the shooter.

Labidi couldn’t help but telling reporters that Soufiane couldn’t find a job after moving to Quebec City and instead opened his own store.

“Go to taxi stands and you’ll see PhDs and people with master’s degrees because we do not find jobs here,” Labidi said.

Taoufik Essekkouri, 46, steps out of his cab holding a coffee and onto the freezing outdoor parking lot. Nearby, a small plane’s propellers begin to spin.

He immigrated from Morocco in 2010 and completed a master’s degree at Laval University in vegetable biology four years later.

“My future here? To be honest, I’m not optimistic,” he said over the loud buzzing of the propellers.

A few hours earlier, several kilometres away in Quebec’s City famed Place d’Youville square, Bachreir Ikhlef, 37, was sitting in his taxi waiting for his next passenger.

He said when he came to Quebec City as a programmer from Algeria in 2011 he was “full of energy.”

A job councillor suggested he get a diploma from a Quebec college in order to help strengthen his resume.

“We were 25 who started the diploma, and by the end only 12 of us finished,” he said about his programmin­g certificat­e.

Government and privatesec­tor research over the past ten years consistent­ly indicate immigrants, particular­ly visible minorities, have higher unemployme­nt rates in Quebec than the rest of the population.

The left-leaning, Quebecbase­d research group IRIS, indicated in 2016 that 43 per cent of immigrants are overqualif­ied for the jobs they hold.

Premier Philippe Couillard told reporters that “our society has the same demons that others have to deal with. Xenophobia, racism, exclusion.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Attendees are seen during the funeral for Abdelkrim Hassane, Khaled Belkacemi and Aboubaker Thabti, three of the six victims of the Quebec City mosque shooting.
CP PHOTO Attendees are seen during the funeral for Abdelkrim Hassane, Khaled Belkacemi and Aboubaker Thabti, three of the six victims of the Quebec City mosque shooting.

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