Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Saskatoon Police Chief Sees No Racism In The Work His Officers Do

The Canadian Press, 11 Dec, 2015 10:45 AM
    SASKATOON — RCMP Commission Bob Paulson has admitted there are racist officers on the force, but Saskatoon's police chief says he doesn't believe racist views are being translated through the work his officers do.
     
    Chief Clive Weighill's comment came Thursday as the city's board of police commissioners considered a report on the practice of street checks, where officers stop and question people out of a "reasonable suspicion" of criminal activity.
     
    Weighill defended the practice but a small group of protesters attended the meeting and stood and turned their backs when the matter was being discussed as a sign of their opposition.
     
    When they refused to sit, they were asked to leave.
     
    Outside the meeting, the protesters said the street checks are disproportionately used on aboriginals, people of colour and poor people.
     
    Earlier this week, Paulson admitted to a meeting of chiefs of the Assembly of First Nations in Gatineau, Que., that there are racists on his police force, adding he doesn't want them there and urging delegates to report any abuses.
     
    The matter has also been at the forefront in Ontario, where the province is trying to legislate street checks, which are also called "carding."
     
    Weighill said some of the proposed rules in Ontario aren't practical, including one that would force officers to tell people being questioned that they have the right to walk away.
     
    "We drive up and say, 'ok, guys, how are you tonight? What are you up to? By the way, you don't have to tell us anything,' " said Weighill. "What do you think the response is going to be? They're not going to tell us anything."
     
    He insisted his officers don't target certain ethnic groups when stopping people on the street, but some of the protesters said that's not the case.
     
    Eileen Bear said she was recently on her way to a knitting class when a police officer pulled over and started questioning her.
     
    He asked her what her name was and although she at first tried to assert her rights she said she caved when a second officer got out of the vehicle. Bear said she was then asked to help identify people on a list of names, but she refused and walked away.
     
    "Carding disproportionately targets indigenous people and peoples of colour as well as poor white people," said protester Kota Kimura, who helps organize a group opposed to police violence.
     
    He said he believes officers tend to act off society's prejudices.
     
    "We have to be able to ask people what they're doing," said Weighill. "Otherwise, we might as well just be sitting in the police building at night, and then after you have been victimized, we'll go out and take your report and drive back in again."
     
    The street check report said the force in Saskatoon will put together a policy once the work of the provincial police commission and the Saskatchewan Association of Chiefs of Police is done.
     
    But Weighill said given the fact that work has just begun, it could be some time before a policy is put in place.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Game 3 Of ALCS In Toronto Goes Head-To-Head With Federal Election

    While the Blue Jays are hosting Kansas City on Monday night, voters will be casting their ballots in the federal election.

    Game 3 Of ALCS In Toronto Goes Head-To-Head With Federal Election

    Transcontinental Closing Its Last Two English-Language Newspapers In Quebec

    Transcontinental Closing Its Last Two English-Language Newspapers In Quebec
    The weekly West Island Chronicle and the Westmount Examiner will cease publication Wednesday, with the loss of three jobs.

    Transcontinental Closing Its Last Two English-Language Newspapers In Quebec

    Post's Andrew Coyne In Public Disagreement With Paper's Endorsement Of Conservatives

    Post's Andrew Coyne In Public Disagreement With Paper's Endorsement Of Conservatives
    Political journalist Andrew Coyne says he has resigned as editor of editorials and comment for the National Post in a "professional disagreement" with the newspaper.

    Post's Andrew Coyne In Public Disagreement With Paper's Endorsement Of Conservatives

    Parties Try To Get Out The Vote As Longest Modern-Day Federal Campaign Ends

    Parties Try To Get Out The Vote As Longest Modern-Day Federal Campaign Ends
    All that remains for exhausted party workers is to get out the vote in what appears to be an epic battle fought over gut-level values as much as election platforms.

    Parties Try To Get Out The Vote As Longest Modern-Day Federal Campaign Ends

    Grieving Alberta Community Remembers Sisters Killed In Farm Accident

    Grieving Alberta Community Remembers Sisters Killed In Farm Accident
    Hundreds of people crowded into the Withrow Gospel Mission, west of Red Deer, on Sunday to honour the memories of Catie Bott, who was 13, and her twin 11-year-old siblings, Jana and Dara Bott.

    Grieving Alberta Community Remembers Sisters Killed In Farm Accident

    Most Friends Post Facebook Pictures To Make You Jealous

    Most Friends Post Facebook Pictures To Make You Jealous
    According to a new British survey done by smartphone maker HTC, almost everybody lies on their Facebook and Instagram profiles to look good.

    Most Friends Post Facebook Pictures To Make You Jealous