Kuwait Times

Rare Canadian police conviction puts spotlight on race relations

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TORONTO:

A six-year prison sentence given to a Toronto policeman in the shooting death of a teenager three years ago was a rare occurrence in Canada, where activists say officers too often get off easy in brutality cases. The case, along with this week’s death of a black man who witnesses say was beaten by police officers, has brought race relations in Canada to the forefront. The 2013 fatal shooting of Sammy Yatim, 18, which occurred after an altercatio­n on a streetcar with the teen, who was brandishin­g a knife, was caught on video and led to widespread protests in Toronto.

The sentencing of the officer, James Forcillo, who was convicted in January, came days after a mentally ill black man, Abdirahman Abdi, died following his arrest by police in Ottawa. The deaths have shone an unflatteri­ng light on race relations in Canada, which prides itself on its multicultu­ralism and tolerance, especially in contrast to the United States. In Montreal, about 50 protesters demonstrat­ed over Abdi’s death, chanting: “Black lives matter.” Marlihan Lopez said that as the mother of a 6-year-old black boy with autism, the case hit close to home.

“In terms of the police, we live in a world where my son’s skin color is deemed as being threatenin­g and his mental state is not understood,” she said. The deaths echoed events in the United States, where a string of police killings of black men and allegation­s of police brutality and racial bias have sparked protests. Some confrontat­ions in the United States were also caught on video. Julian Falconer, a lawyer for Yatim’s mother, said police needed more training to deal with mentally ill people as well as lapel cameras to ensure accountabi­lity.

“You have people that are not well and they are shot like dogs in the street,” he told reporters. “It’s a tragic day for the Forcillo family, for the Yatim family, for the community, and for policing,” said Michael McCormack, president of the Toronto Police Associatio­n union. “There’s never going to be any good outcome from this and it’s tragic all around.”

Shootings underrepor­ted

Last year, a Toronto police officer shot and killed Andrew Loku, a 45-year-old Sudanese immigrant with a history of mental illness. No charges were filed. Sandy Hudson, co-founder of Black Lives Matter Toronto, the only official Canadian chapter of the movement, said police shootings were underrepor­ted by media in Canada because surveillan­ce footage was not as accessible and data was not always compiled by race north of the border. “The reason for our existence is to dispel the myth that it is somehow safer in Canada, that it doesn’t happen in Canada,” she said. The group strategize­s with Black Lives Matters’ national chapter in Los Angeles, which has provided organizati­onal support for larger protests, she added. Ontario’s Special Investigat­ions Unit, or SIU,, an arms-length agency that investigat­es cases of death, serious injury or sexual assault involving police, launched 266 cases in the 2014-15 fiscal year, including six shooting deaths, 12 deaths in custody and 41 sexual assault allegation­s.— Reuters

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