Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Tighter Security But Toronto Pride Festivities To Go On, Organizers Say

The Canadian Press, 13 Jun, 2016 01:33 PM
  • Tighter Security But Toronto Pride Festivities To Go On, Organizers Say
TORONTO — Shocked but undeterred by the weekend massacre in Florida, organizers of Toronto's gay pride festivities pledged on Monday the show would go on amid increased security and a determination to highlight the community's strength.
 
The horrific events in Orlando will certainly be in the back of people's minds, said Mathieu Chantelois, executive director of Pride Toronto, but that won't change what's already been planned.
 
"We will march, we will rally, we will talk about human rights. We will have the biggest parade ever. We will dance in the streets and we will dance in the clubs," Chantelois said.
 
Pride organizers met representatives of the RCMP, city police and the prime minister's office on Monday to discuss security concerns. While Chantelois refused to comment on any specifics, observers said more uniformed police would be on hand, but more plainclothes officers and others would both mingle with, and keep watch on, the crowds.
 
Chantelois called it a blessing that Justin Trudeau is slated to be the first sitting prime minister to take part in the parade — which takes place on July 3 and will feature a minute of silence for the Orlando victims — because of the security expertise the RCMP will bring with him.
 
Ross McLean, a former Toronto police officer and crime specialist, said the Florida mass shooting will undoubtedly raise the vigilance levels of security agencies.
 
"Whenever you're dealing with terror issues, it's intelligence that really is what saves you; it's not the responding to it," McLean said.
 
"They're going to be watching and looking at the threat level and the chatter from the people they have on their watch lists."
 
The main safety challenge is the diversity of those who might be motivated to attack the activities — ranging from the organized and committed terrorist to the mentally unstable. However, the likeliest threat, experts said, is that posed by an attention-seeking copy cats rather than groups such as the Islamic State.
 
In addition, the capability for a loner to cause disproportionate destruction has increased in recent years, with home-made bombs, for example, relatively easy to assemble and plant.
 
"The timeline has really collapsed," said Ray Boisvert, a former assistant director with Canada's intelligence service and now a security consultant.
 
"People quickly mobilize. They go from thinking about something to suddenly doing something."
 
In Ottawa, RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson said the massacre demonstrates the vulnerability of a democratic society to "lone-wolf actors" and those inspired by the ISIL message.
 
"It sort of reinforces the need to be engaged and active in community-based prevention efforts, counter-radicalization and so on," Paulson said.
 
"My staff have been looking at the Orlando situation and assessing what the implications for Canada are."
 
 
Const. Danelle Botttineau said she didn't think the threat level in Toronto had changed as a result of the nightclub massacre but said police were "continually assessing and looking at our game plan" to ensure security.
 
Regardless of any specific risk change, Boisvert said, authorities have to act responsibly and do what they can to ensure public safety in light of the attack.
 
The best defence, he said, is having an alert population which reports potential threats and is aware of surroundings at public events.
 
"People know when people in their circles are acting weird," Boisvert said. "Sometimes you do have to be your brother's keeper and your sister's keeper."
 
In the interim, Chantelois said, the Florida killings have focused attention on the ongoing and almost routine risk the LGBTQ community faces. He regularly receives hate mail and warnings, he said.
 
Still, the attack on the Florida nightclub has hit hard.
 
"Clubs for the queer community are a place where normally we feel we are safe," Chantelois said.
 
"So the threat is there but we will not let fear get in the way of what we do. We want people to get out. To march with us. To dance with us. We have to be strong as a community. We have to be visible."

MORE National ARTICLES

Philpott Visits Two Embattled Northern Ontario Reserves To See Conditions

Philpott Visits Two Embattled Northern Ontario Reserves To See Conditions
OTTAWA — Health Minister Jane Philpott is visting two beleaguered reserves in northern Ontario today —  Attawapiskat and Kashechewan — to see conditions in the communities first-hand.

Philpott Visits Two Embattled Northern Ontario Reserves To See Conditions

MP Hunter Tootoo Likely Hit 'Brick Wall' With Alcohol Problem: Aunt

MP Hunter Tootoo Likely Hit 'Brick Wall' With Alcohol Problem: Aunt
OTTAWA — Hunter Tootoo likely "hit a brick wall" before deciding to step down from his Liberal cabinet post in order to get help for a drinking problem — a struggle that's all too familiar to members of his family, his aunt said Wednesday.

MP Hunter Tootoo Likely Hit 'Brick Wall' With Alcohol Problem: Aunt

Calgary Trial Hears Diabetic Teen Was Malnourished, Covered With Ulce

Calgary Trial Hears Diabetic Teen Was Malnourished, Covered With Ulce
Forensic pathologist Dr. Jeffery Gofton detailed his examination of Alexandru Radita at the trial of his parents in Calgary.

Calgary Trial Hears Diabetic Teen Was Malnourished, Covered With Ulce

Quebec Becomes Latest Province To Cut Annual Physical Exams For Healthy Patients

Quebec Becomes Latest Province To Cut Annual Physical Exams For Healthy Patients
MONTREAL — Healthy Quebecers may now have a harder time booking routine annual physical exams after the province became the latest jurisdiction Wednesday to implement rules to eliminate the once-standard practice.

Quebec Becomes Latest Province To Cut Annual Physical Exams For Healthy Patients

Teen Boy Stabbed Outside Toronto High School, Police Look For Suspect

Teen Boy Stabbed Outside Toronto High School, Police Look For Suspect
Officers were called to the Scarborough Centre for Alternative Studies shortly after 11 a.m. on Thursday.

Teen Boy Stabbed Outside Toronto High School, Police Look For Suspect

Homosexual Men In Small Cities Less Likely To Be Tested For HIV

Homosexual Men In Small Cities Less Likely To Be Tested For HIV
Men who live in small cities and have sex with other men are less likely to get an HIV test than their metropolitan counterparts, says a study.

Homosexual Men In Small Cities Less Likely To Be Tested For HIV