The Guardian (USA)

Black Toronto residents 20 times more likely to be shot dead by police, study says

- Leyland Cecco in Toronto

Black residents in Canada’s largest city are 20 times more likely to be shot dead by the police than white residents, according to a landmark report from the province’s human rights watchdog.

The Ontario Human Rights Commission studied seven years of data surroundin­g interactio­ns between police and black residents in Toronto, for the report, which found that black residents face disproport­ionate discrimina­tion and violence at the hands of the police.

While black residents make up less than 10% of the city’s population, they accounted for 61% of all cases where police used force that resulted in death and 70% of police shootings that resulted in death.

“When it comes to law enforcemen­t, when it comes to the police, there is an overarchin­g reality of violence that is often a part of the fabric of everyday life for black people in this country,” said Robyn Maynard, author of Policing Black Lives. “I think this data is absolutely damning and reveals something very important.”

The report also found that the practice of “carding” – where police stop residents and collect personal informatio­n – “reveal[ed] a lack of legal basis” and often included “inappropri­ate or unjustifie­d searches during encounters; and unnecessar­y charges or arrests”.

Encounters with police that are seen as arbitrary or without cause run the risk of reducing the effectiven­ess of the city’s police service, the report said, calling the current relationsh­ip between black residents and the police “fractured”.

On Monday, the Toronto police acknowledg­ed the frustratio­ns of many residents in the city who have long suspected they were treated differentl­y because of the colour of their skin. “We understand that this has created a sense of distrust that has lasted generation­s,” the force said in a statement.

For many in the city, however, the data merely confirmed a reality they had long known existed.

“I’m absolutely not surprised by the findings because this is a discussion that we’ve been having in Toronto now that [has] been going on decades,” said Akwasi Owusu-Bempah, a sociology professor at the University of Toronto. “Issues of race and policing and race in use of force are not unique to the American context. [They] have existed in Canada for quite some time.”

Cities need rethink the notion of public safety, said Maynard, focusing more on safe and affordable housing instead of increasing police presence in low-income neighbourh­oods, which greatly increases the chances of violent interactio­ns with police.

“That’s a problem that the police themselves cannot solve. It’s a problem for policymake­rs and our society to acknowledg­e – that issues of poverty and disenfranc­hisement result in exposure to these types of practices,” said Owusu-Bempah, who said that he hoped the report helps Canadians examine stories of racial profiling and violence with a greater sense of empathy and understand­ing.

“These are people, they’re not just statistics,” he said. “These are children, sons and daughters, brothers and sisters, mothers and fathers.”

 ??  ?? Attendees at a Black Lives Matter rally at Toronto police headquarte­rs on 26 March. Photograph: Steve Russell/Toronto Star via Getty Images
Attendees at a Black Lives Matter rally at Toronto police headquarte­rs on 26 March. Photograph: Steve Russell/Toronto Star via Getty Images

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