Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Indigenous Women Overrepresented In Vancouver Police Checks: Rights Advocates

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jul, 2018 12:11 PM
    VANCOUVER — Indigenous and civil rights activists seeking an investigation of the Vancouver Police Department's use of random street checks want to amend their complaint based on new data showing Aboriginal women are checked more often than other groups.
     
     
    In June, the B.C. Civil Liberties Association and Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs asked the province's police complaint commissioner to investigate a significant racial disparity in the use of street checks.
     
     
    During the checks, also called carding, police stop a person, obtain their identification and record personal information, even though no particular offence has occurred.
     
     
    The association says in a news release that recently obtained data show Indigenous women accounted for 21 per cent of all checks of women in 2016, despite only making up two per cent of Vancouver's female population.
     
     
    The data was supplied by the Vancouver Police Department following a Freedom of Information request and was received after the original complaint was sent to the complaint commissioner.
     
     
    A further amendment asks the commissioner to examine police stops in which personal information is elicited but the stop is not recorded as a street check so it doesn't show up in police department data.
     
     
    The original complaint was based on data from a Freedom of Information request that shows 15 per cent of street checks conducted between 2008 and 2017 were of Indigenous people, yet they make up just two per cent of the population.
     
     
    The news release says during that period, Indigenous men formed one per cent of the city's population, yet accounted for about 12 per cent of total street checks, while three per cent of checks involved black men, although they form just half a per cent of Vancouver's population.
     
     
    When the complaint was filed in June, Chief Bob Chamberlin of the B.C. Union of Indian Chiefs said the disproportionate rate of checks on Indigenous people was "staggering," and he is angered by the newest data disclosed by police. 
     
     
    "We will not accept this example of institutionalized racism and we demand an immediate independent investigation," he says in the release.
     
     
    "How can we speak about true reconciliation when Indigenous peoples, and particularly women, are being targeted by the police on a daily basis?"

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Woman Must Pay Musician Ex-Boyfriend $350k For Sabotaging Coveted Opportunity

    Woman Must Pay Musician Ex-Boyfriend $350k For Sabotaging Coveted Opportunity
    TORONTO — A woman who sabotaged her boyfriend's highly coveted career opportunity apparently because she feared he would leave her for the United States has been ordered to pay him $350,000 in damages.

    Woman Must Pay Musician Ex-Boyfriend $350k For Sabotaging Coveted Opportunity

    Only Canadian Woman To Have Name Engraved On Stanley Cup, Sonia Scurfield, Dies

    Only Canadian Woman To Have Name Engraved On Stanley Cup, Sonia Scurfield, Dies
    CALGARY — Sonia Scurfield, the only Canadian woman to have her name engraved on the Stanley Cup, has died at Foothills Hospital in Calgary at the age of 89.

    Only Canadian Woman To Have Name Engraved On Stanley Cup, Sonia Scurfield, Dies

    All Kids Should Get Vaccinated For Hepatitis B At Birth, Experts Say

    Currently, most provinces and territories immunize children against the liver-destroying virus when they are much older, including Ontario and Nova Scotia, which suggest children be vaccinated as late as 12 years old.

    All Kids Should Get Vaccinated For Hepatitis B At Birth, Experts Say

    Student Says Sexual Relationship With Teacher Had Negative Effect On His Life

    WINNIPEG — A young man told court that every step forward seems like three steps back during the sentencing hearing for a Winnipeg educational assistant found guilty of sexually exploiting the student.

    Student Says Sexual Relationship With Teacher Had Negative Effect On His Life

    Transport Canada Says It Wasn't Feces That Fell Onto People And Cars In B.C.

    Transport Canada Says It Wasn't Feces That Fell Onto People And Cars In B.C.
    VANCOUVER — Transport Canada says a substance that fell from the sky and onto vehicles and people in two British Columbia communities was not human feces from aircraft.

    Transport Canada Says It Wasn't Feces That Fell Onto People And Cars In B.C.

    Americans Reach Across The Border, Urge Canadians To Ignore Trump

    Americans Reach Across The Border, Urge Canadians To Ignore Trump
    Usually, it's Canadians who are quick to say sorry.

    Americans Reach Across The Border, Urge Canadians To Ignore Trump