Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Pride Toronto's Way Of Dealing With Black LGBTQ Youth 'Abysmal': Group

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jul, 2016 12:06 PM
    TORONTO — An activist group fighting for more rights for racialized communities says the way organizers of Canada's largest Pride parade deal with blackness and black LGBTQ youth is "abysmal."
     
    Black Lives Matter Toronto says organizers, particularly Pride Toronto's executive director Mathieu Chantelois, need to be held accountable for their actions. 
     
    The group, a Canadian chapter of the a larger U.S. movement, temporarily halted Toronto's Pride parade Sunday to issue a series of demands that included more funding and better representation for racialized communities during Pride events.
     
    It also called for a ban on police floats in future parades, though stressed that individual officers identifying as LGBTQ would be welcome.
     
    The parade resumed about half an hour later when Chantelois signed the list of demands but told the media that he only did it so he could get the event moving again.
     
    The protest was the latest in a series of actions taken by the group that has frequently accused Toronto police of racial profiling and violence against the black community.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    First Ever Habitat For Humanity Home To Open On Reserve In Saskatchewan

    First Ever Habitat For Humanity Home To Open On Reserve In Saskatchewan
    MEADOW LAKE, Sask. — The walls are up and the roof is on at Habitat for Humanity's first ever on-reserve build in Canada.

    First Ever Habitat For Humanity Home To Open On Reserve In Saskatchewan

    Muskrat Falls Estimate Surpasses $11 Billion: 'Project Was Not The Right Choice'

    Muskrat Falls Estimate Surpasses $11 Billion: 'Project Was Not The Right Choice'
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Estimated costs for the troubled Muskrat Falls hydro megaproject in Labrador have now hit $11.4 billion including financing.

    Muskrat Falls Estimate Surpasses $11 Billion: 'Project Was Not The Right Choice'

    Judge To Sentence Parents Whose Little Boy Died Of Bacterial Meningitis

    LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — A southern Alberta couple found guilty of failing to provide the necessaries of life for their 19-month-old son will be sentenced today, more than four years after his death from bacterial meningitis.

    Judge To Sentence Parents Whose Little Boy Died Of Bacterial Meningitis

    Alberta's Notley Speaks About Climate Plan To Trans Mountain Pipeline Panel

    Alberta's Notley Speaks About Climate Plan To Trans Mountain Pipeline Panel
    EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Rachel Notley says she told an environmental review panel on the Trans Mountain Pipeline that her province is doing its bit to control greenhouse gas emissions.

    Alberta's Notley Speaks About Climate Plan To Trans Mountain Pipeline Panel

    City Mystified As Large Tree Suddenly Topples In Vancouver's West End

    City Mystified As Large Tree Suddenly Topples In Vancouver's West End
    The tree was among a row of similar trees, all roughly 12 metres tall, along the 1800 block of Nelson Street, just north of Denman Street.

    City Mystified As Large Tree Suddenly Topples In Vancouver's West End

    4-Year-Old Child Dies After Fall From Bedroom Window Of Langley, B.C. Home

    4-Year-Old Child Dies After Fall From Bedroom Window Of Langley, B.C. Home
    The Mounties say the child was not home alone at the time.

    4-Year-Old Child Dies After Fall From Bedroom Window Of Langley, B.C. Home