Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Muslim officer works with immigrants in Ohio capital city

- By Andrew WelshHuggi­ns

COLUMBUS, OHIO » After 10 years in hotel management, Khaled Bahgat grew accustomed to defusing tense situations involving out-ofcontrol banquet hall parties. Often, he had the situation in hand by the time police showed up.

One day, an officer asked, “Have you ever thought about being a police officer yourself?”

It was the farthest thing from the mind of the Egyptian-born Bahgat, who arrived in Columbus as a teenager in 1980 speaking almost no English. But he applied and has served as an officer in Ohio’s largest city for 21 years.

Recently, police chief Kim Jacobs appointed Bahgat a liaison officer between the department and the city’s growing immigrant population­s, particular­ly people from Somalia and Bhutanese-Nepali refugees. Bahgat joins Columbus officers with outreach responsibi­lities to the black and gay communitie­s.

“There has definitely been some areas where law enforcemen­t doesn’t understand the culture, and likewise the culture doesn’t understand why we do the things that we do,” Bahgat told worshipper­s last month at Masjid Ibnu Taymiyah and Islamic Center, a mosque on Columbus’ north side serving mainly Somali immigrants.

Yet everyone shares the same goal, he said. “We want to make sure that we can offer everybody and a safe neighborho­od we want to make sure that we’re all on the same page,” said Bahgat, dubbed the department’s New American Diversity and Inclusion Officer.

Police Chief Kim Jacobs said her goal in appointing Bahgat was breaking down communicat­ion barriers preventing police from hearing from everyone in the city. He joins officers around the country who have been appointmen­t to achieve similar goals.

Houston police have officers working with the city’s Muslim, Vietnamese, LGBTQ, Hispanic and other communitie­s. The Minneapoli­s police department, with the country’s largest Somali population, has outreach officers for the city’s East African immigrants along with southeast Asians and American Indians. The Washington, D.C. department has officers who work with the deaf community, a large population thanks to the presence of Gallaudet University.

In Virginia Beach, Filipino-American officers are frequently in touch with the city’s large Filipino community, said chief James Cervera.

“It’s very hard close,” he said.

Outreach efforts are valuable tools for police department­s, particular­ly at a time agencies are having difficulty reflecting the local community make-up on their force, said Nelson Lim, a RAND Corporatio­n researcher who helps police department­s and the military diversify their workforces.

“You have to to hate up turn the whole force around and then say, ‘Hey, not just this officer is responsibl­e for this — all of us are responsibl­e for including everyone, regardless of their background,’” Lim said.

Orlando’s outreach efforts attempt this broad brush approach, with “Orlando Speaks” public forums that bring together officers and residents. The city adopted the concept after town hall meetings deteriorat­ed into shouting matches, said chief John Mina.

Orlando resident Kisha Ohana, who is black, said the forums helped her understand what officers face on the job. She still doesn’t think a lot of black Orlando residents trust police, though she does herself after sitting through one such forum.

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TY WRIGHT - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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