Ottawa Citizen

Inuit leader asks police chief to call texts ‘racist’

Bordeleau responds he’s sorry for the hurt caused by ‘racial undertones’

- SUSANA MAS With files from Joe Lofaro smas@postmedia.com twitter.com/susanamas

Ottawa police Chief Charles Bordeleau ought to denounce the “racist views” allegedly made by one of his officers about Inuit and other indigenous peoples, Natan Obed says in his first public remarks since the death of renowned Inuit artist Annie Pootoogook.

Obed, president of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, the national organizati­on representi­ng Canada’s 60,000 Inuit, said in an open letter sent to the Citizen that Bordeleau’s refusal to call out racist behaviour within his force comes at the expense of Canada’s indigenous communitie­s and other marginaliz­ed members of society.

His public remarks come after Ottawa police launched an investigat­ion into one of their own officers after Veldon Coburn, an Algonquin man, complained that comments posted on a Facebook account linking back to a police officer were “hostile and racist.”

The online comments were posted under an Ottawa Citizen article in which the police asked for the public’s help in retracing the steps of Pootoogook, whose body was found in the Rideau River on Sept. 19.

They were posted by a Facebook account linking back to Sgt. Chris Hrnchiar. The comments have since been deleted and the name on the account changed, but not before Coburn captured images of the officer in his police uniform.

While the police did not initially deem Pootoogook’s death as suspicious, it is now treating it as such.

One of the comments posted online said: “Because much of the aboriginal population in Canada is just satisfied being alcohol or drug abusers, living in poor conditions etc ... they have to have the will to change, it’s not society’s fault.”

Another comment appeared to pass judgment on the case as the investigat­ion was underway.

“And of course this has nothing to do with missing and murdered Aboriginal women ... it’s not a murder case ... it’s (sic) could be a suicide, accidental, she got drunk and fell in the river and drowned who knows ... typically many Aboriginal­s have very short lifespans, talent or not,” the post said.

Bordeleau condemned the remarks this week but stopped short of calling them racist.

“This shameful, clumsy endorsemen­t of racist behaviour by his subordinat­e has dangerous implicatio­ns for marginaliz­ed members of the population like Inuit,” Obed says in the open letter.

“Ottawa police Chief Bordeleau’s attempt to gloss over the real-life implicatio­ns for Indigenous peoples of having an outwardly racist police officer serving the city of Ottawa comes at a time when Canada has committed itself to a path of reconcilia­tion with Indigenous Canadians.“This is unacceptab­le,” Obed says.

In an email to the Citizen Friday, Bordeleau decried the “racial undertones” of the online comments, and said he was “sorry for the hurt” they have caused.

“I was made aware of the comments Sunday night,” his email said. “I ordered an investigat­ion the following morning and the comments were removed from the site that day.

“The comments have racial undertones and do not reflect the values of the Ottawa Police Service.”

Mayor Jim Watson had earlier stopped short of calling the online remarks racist, saying the language used in the comments posted online were “offensive and bordering on being racist.”

 ?? WAYNE CUDDINGTON/FILES ?? Celebrated Inuit artist Annie Pootoogook draws a picture while sitting on the sidewalk near the Rideau Centre in 2012. Pootoogook’s body was found Sept. 19 in the Rideau River.
WAYNE CUDDINGTON/FILES Celebrated Inuit artist Annie Pootoogook draws a picture while sitting on the sidewalk near the Rideau Centre in 2012. Pootoogook’s body was found Sept. 19 in the Rideau River.

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