Times Colonist

Man banned from club fails to get human-rights hearing

- BETH LEIGHTON

VANCOUVER — The B.C. Human Rights Tribunal won’t reconsider its refusal to hear a Vancouver man’s complaint that his dance club banned him for being “creepy,” and discrimina­ted against him on the basis of age, sex and race.

Mokua Gichuru asked the tribunal to rethink a 2017 finding that the Vancouver Swing Society “has a right to ban individual­s for inappropri­ate behaviour, regardless of sex, age or any other characteri­stic.”

Gichuru claimed new evidence from a club member’s March 2017 Facebook post supported his request for reconsider­ation because he said it revealed the swing club refuses to consider harassment complaints raised by men and won’t listen to “a man’s side of the story.”

The post, about unrelated sexual assault allegation­s made two years earlier against an internatio­nal dance instructor who was black, said the choice to stand with the victim included banning the abuser, a reference Gichuru argued was aimed at him, an older, black man.

But tribunal member Walter Rilkoff disagreed that the Facebook post refers to Gichuru or that it supports an allegation that the dance club does not fairly handle complaints of harassment.

Gichuru initially complained that he was accused of “mansplaini­ng,” or explaining something in a condescend­ing way, and was unfriended on Facebook by a club member after posting an opinion about United States politics, but the exchange degenerate­d to complaints that he had harassed a female club member.

After those details surfaced, Gichuru was banned from volunteeri­ng or attending swing society events for the rest of that year, leading to his first appeal to the tribunal and its refusal to consider his case further.

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