The Peterborough Examiner

Ban random police checks: Singh

NDP leader says carding tells people ‘there’s something wrong with just being who you are’

- MICHAEL MACDONALD The Canadian Press

HALIFAX — Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh is renewing his call for a ban on all random police street checks, saying the practice — sometimes known as carding — is a form of systemic racism.

“People are being stopped because of the colour of their skin,” he told an outdoor news conference, held in a park that is in a predominan­tly black neighbourh­ood in Halifax’s north end.

“That’s not good policing. That’s not good for building a vibrant society ... When you’re stopped in your community for no reason, it makes you feel like you have no worth.”

Singh said he was detained by police for no reason multiple times when he was younger, and it continued to happen when he was a law student in Toronto.

The leader, elected to lead the federal NDP last October, has said police have stopped him 11 times over the years, with the first incident of what he describes as racial profiling happening when he was 17.

“This is an issue that impacts folks across Canada,” he said. “Being stopped in your own community ... for no other reason than the way you look is something that sends a message that ... there’s something wrong with just being who you are.”

Last September, the Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission hired an independen­t expert to review street checks in Halifax after police data showed black men were three times more likely than whites to be subjected to the controvers­ial practice.

Advocates of street checks say it helps law enforcemen­t gather intelligen­ce and improve public safety, while opponents say it targets visible minorities and violates human rights.

Halifax police have said street checks are used to record suspicious activity. Although police stop and question people, the checks can also be “passive,” with informatio­n recorded based on observatio­ns rather than interactio­ns.

Last year, Ontario banned police checks. The regulation prohibits police from arbitraril­y collecting identifyin­g informatio­n based on a person’s race or presence in a high-crime area.

Flanked by local activists and Nova Scotia NDP justice critic Claudia Chender, Singh said police must use proper investigat­ive procedures and have reasonable grounds before they attempt to detain anyone.

Chender said Nova Scotia’s opposition New Democrats were poised to table proposed legislatio­n Friday that would impose an immediate moratorium on street checks, which she described as an unlawful form of detention.

“We’ve heard evidence for years and years from our African Nova Scotian community and other racialized communitie­s that this practice is insidious and commonplac­e,” she said. “And our position is that it’s not necessary for good policing.”

Singh also called on the federal government to scrap the mandatory minimum sentencing rules introduced by the former Conservati­ve government, saying the legislatio­n has had a disproport­ionate impact on racialized communitie­s.

 ?? PATRICK DOYLE THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? NDP leader Jagmeet Singh is calling for a ban on all random police street checks known as carding.
PATRICK DOYLE THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO NDP leader Jagmeet Singh is calling for a ban on all random police street checks known as carding.

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