Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Reaches Out To Syrian Refugees In Wake Of Pepper-Spray Attack

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Jan, 2016 11:51 AM
    VANCOUVER — A prominent member of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's cabinet is reaching out to Syrian refugees after a group of newly arrived migrants were pepper sprayed at a welcome event in Vancouver.
     
    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan described Friday night's attack as an "isolated incident" and said the Syrian refugees he met with the following day were resilient and happy to be in Canada.
     
    "In the last 24 hours I was able to visit a mosque, a church and a Sikh gurdwara, all communities who are supporting and welcoming refugees. That's the real Canadian way," he said on Sunday.
     
    "It's so good to see communities rallying around after an event like that to be able to say that, 'No, this is who we really are.'"
     
    A crowd was gathered outside a Muslim Association of Canada centre during an event for government-sponsored Syrian refugees on Friday around 10:30 p.m. when a man on a bicycle rode by and pepper sprayed about 15 people, said Vancouver police spokesman St. Randy Fincham.
     
    Police are investigating the incident as a hate crime.
     
    Sajjan spoke with some of the Syrian refugees present for the attack during a welcome gathering in his Vancouver-area riding Saturday evening that was planned before Friday's pepper spray incident.
     
    "They're so happy to be able to be here in Canada," he said, describing the event's atmosphere as celebratory.
     
    "Because of the positive reaction that they're getting from everywhere they go, a horrible but isolated incident like this can be quickly forgotten and they can get on with their life."
     
    Tima Kurdi, a prominent member of Canada's Syrian community, dismissed the attack as a one-off event that doesn't reflect how the majority of Canadians view the newly arrived migrants.
     
    She said the support Canadians have shown to refugees is "unbelievable" and they shouldn't be blamed for Friday night's incident.
     
    "To be honest, Canadian people would not do this, the majority of them," she said. "They are big supporters to the refugees."
     
     
    Kurdi became an overnight spokeswoman for the plight of Syrian refugees after a photo of her three-year-old nephew lying dead on a Turkish beach drew global outrage and attention to the migrant crisis in the Middle East.
     
    Canada's Immigration Minister John McCallum described Friday's pepper spraying as an "isolated incident" that won't tarnish the country's migrant-friendly reputation.
     
    The world recognizes that Canada is very welcoming to refugees, and that message will continue to resonate, said McCallum.
     
    Canada has been praised on the world stage for its pledge to take in 25,000 Syrian refugees by the end of next month, and a photo of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau welcoming migrants at the airport was published around the world.
     
    McCallum said his government utterly condemns the pepper spraying and says Syrian refugees have no reason to feel unsafe in Canada.
     
    "I think that the experience that the vast majority of them have, of being welcomed at the airport, and given what they need, clothing and hats and boots, and large numbers of welcoming Canadians ... I think that sent a very clear message," he said in an interview Saturday.
     
    "I think that experience shared by so many of the refugees is going to easily trump this one isolated incident."
     
     
    British Columbia's jobs minister Shirley Bond said Saturday that she was dismayed that the province will be talked about across the country because of a "shameful act."
     
    She said the incident is entirely contrary to what she's seen across B.C., where people have opened their homes and offered generosity to Syrian refugees.
     
    "British Columbia is known as a place that is inclusive, that is incredibly multicultural," she said.
     
    "I was heartsick, because this is not who we are. It does not reflect our values. I think British Columbians need to stand up and condemn what happened, and I think that will be the strongest message we can send."
     
    PEPPER SPRAYING WON'T HARM CANADA'S REPUTATION ON REFUGEES: IMMIGRATION MINISTER JOHN MCCALLUM
     
    VANCOUVER — Canada's immigration minister says the pepper spraying of Syrian refugees in Vancouver was an "isolated incident" that won't tarnish the country's migrant-friendly reputation.
     
    John McCallum says the world recognizes that Canada is very welcoming to refugees and predicts that message will resonate despite the pepper spraying of a group of Syrians Friday night.
     
    Vancouver Police said a large group was gathered outside a Muslim Association of Canada centre during an event for newly arrived Syrian refugees when a man on a bicycle sprayed the crowd.
     
     
    Police said about 15 people were treated for exposure to the spray and they are investigating the incident as a hate crime.
     
    Canada has been praised on the world stage for its pledge to take in 25,000 Syrian refugees by the end of next month, and a photo of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau welcoming migrants at the airport was published around the world.
     
    McCallum says his government utterly condemns the pepper spraying and says Syrian refugees have no reason to feel unsafe in Canada.
     
    "I think that the experience that the vast majority of them have, of being welcomed at the airport, and given what they need, clothing and hats and boots, and large numbers of welcoming Canadians ... I think that sent a very clear message," he says.
     
    "I think that experience shared by so many of the refugees is going to easily trump this one isolated incident."
     
    British Columbia's jobs minister Shirley Bond says she is dismayed that the province will be talked about across the country because of a "shameful act."
     
    She says the incident is entirely contrary to what she's seen across B.C., where people have opened their homes and offered generosity to Syrian refugees.
     
     
    "British Columbia is known as a place that is inclusive, that is incredibly multicultural," she says.
     
    "I was heartsick, because this is not who we are. It does not reflect our values. I think British Columbians need to stand up and condemn what happened, and I think that will be the strongest message we can send."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ivan Henry Wrongful-Imprisonment Case About Risks Of Self-Representation: Crown

    John Hunter says 69-year-old Ivan Henry should bear some responsibility for his conviction after repeatedly refusing legal counsel during his 1982 sexual-assault trial.

    Ivan Henry Wrongful-Imprisonment Case About Risks Of Self-Representation: Crown

    Rohinie Bisesar, Indian-Origin Woman Stabs Shoppers Drug Mart Employee To Death In Toronto

    Rohinie Bisesar, Indian-Origin Woman Stabs Shoppers Drug Mart Employee To Death In Toronto
    Rohinie Bisesar stabbed the victim at a Shoppers Drug Mart in Toronto's financial district last Friday.

    Rohinie Bisesar, Indian-Origin Woman Stabs Shoppers Drug Mart Employee To Death In Toronto

    Surrey Police, Health Officials Issue Unusual Pre-Christmas Fentanyl Warning To Families

    Surrey Police, Health Officials Issue Unusual Pre-Christmas Fentanyl Warning To Families
    Police say the respiratory depressant is 50 to 100 times more toxic than morphine and is being cut into other illegal drugs.

    Surrey Police, Health Officials Issue Unusual Pre-Christmas Fentanyl Warning To Families

    Christopher Neil, Convicted Pedophile Dubbed 'Swirl Face' Pleads Guilty In B.C. To 5 Sex Charges

    Christopher Neil, Convicted Pedophile Dubbed 'Swirl Face' Pleads Guilty In B.C. To 5 Sex Charges
    British Columbia man imprisoned in Thailand for sexually assaulting young boys has pleaded guilty in Canada to five sex tourism and pornography charges involving children

    Christopher Neil, Convicted Pedophile Dubbed 'Swirl Face' Pleads Guilty In B.C. To 5 Sex Charges

    Punjabi Singer Lehmber Singh Goes Missing From Mississauga, Ontario

    Punjabi Singer Lehmber Singh Goes Missing From Mississauga, Ontario
    According to police, Lehmber Singh had come from India to perform music. He had about $100 (rpt $100) with him when he went missing from Mississauga on the outskirts of Toronto.

    Punjabi Singer Lehmber Singh Goes Missing From Mississauga, Ontario

    Men Accused Of Running Down B.C. Sheep With Trucks Charged, Say Mounties

    Men Accused Of Running Down B.C. Sheep With Trucks Charged, Say Mounties
    The collision occurred on Oct. 1, on a four-lane stretch of Highway 3, near Keremeos, about 350 kilometres east of Vancouver.

    Men Accused Of Running Down B.C. Sheep With Trucks Charged, Say Mounties