Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Police Told To Get Indigenous Training

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Dec, 2019 10:19 PM

    VANCOUVER - A British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal says Vancouver police officers discriminated against an Indigenous mother and has ordered the police board to pay compensation and train its officer about the legacies of colonialism.

     

    The ruling says when Deborah Campbell asked questions during her 19-year-old son's arrest in 2016, she was "roughly and physically separated from him" and warned she could be arrested for obstructing justice.

     

    The police board denied during a hearing that its officers discriminated, saying the woman was interfering with their ability to secure the scene, while the officers said she was "escorted" away from the arrest in disputing how rough her removal was.

     

    Tribunal member Devyn Cousineau ruled police failed to account for the long history of colonialism and historical trauma on Indigenous Peoples, including the state's intervention involving their children.

     

    She ordered the board pay Campbell $21,500 for costs and injury to her dignity, feelings and self-respect.

     

    The police board has also been given a year to train its officers who deal with Indigenous people to minimize the effects of stereotypes and to address Indigenous needs during police encounters with the legacy of colonialism in mind.

     

    Cousineau says in the ruling issued Thursday that Indigenous people have a troubled relationship with police and don't trust them, which the Vancouver Police Department spelled out in its own report, Breaking Barriers Building Bridges, released last year.

     

    "Ms. Campbell immediately situated the encounter in a historical and present-day context which caused her to be afraid for her son’s safety and perceive the police officers to be acting based on prejudice," the ruling says.

     

    Cousineau says the officers were poorly equipped to meet Campbell's specific needs as an Indigenous mother and that they interpreted her conduct through the lens of suspicion and stereotype, responding in disproportionate ways.

     

    "As a result, Ms. Campbell was rendered powerless and small, and prevented from ensuring her son's safety," she says, concluding the police discriminated against the woman on the basis of her race, colour and ancestry.

     

    She said the only training the officers received about policing Indigenous people was a half day course in 2015 and three of the officers involved in the incident had never heard of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

     

    "Because of the deep level on which stereotyping and bias operate, there must be an active strategy for resisting it. Here, there was none."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Organizations Distancing Themselves From Disgraced Royal

    A prominent member of the Royal Family has little ground left to lose in Canada even as he faces fresh scrutiny and public rebukes closer to home.    

    Canadian Organizations Distancing Themselves From Disgraced Royal

    Poem Gives Fresh Voice To African-canadian Pioneer Of Song And Stage, Portia White

    HALIFAX - As a boy, George Elliott Clarke browsed a family album and marvelled at the "shimmering career" of his great aunt Portia White, an African-Canadian woman who became an acclaimed classical singer in the 1940s.    

    Poem Gives Fresh Voice To African-canadian Pioneer Of Song And Stage, Portia White

    Enchaced Camera Surveillance, Stiffer Panhandling Fines Floated In Winnipeg Safety Report

    Enchaced Camera Surveillance, Stiffer Panhandling Fines Floated In Winnipeg Safety Report
    The report was commissioned earlier this year as crime spiked in the city.    

    Enchaced Camera Surveillance, Stiffer Panhandling Fines Floated In Winnipeg Safety Report

    Motherhood, Social Norms Behind Gender Wage Gap In Canada: Finance Canada Docs

    Motherhood, Social Norms Behind Gender Wage Gap In Canada: Finance Canada Docs
    An internal government analysis concludes motherhood — and the societal expectations that come with it — are major factors in the gender wage gap.

    Motherhood, Social Norms Behind Gender Wage Gap In Canada: Finance Canada Docs

    Old-Age Benefits Have Dramatic Effect On Poverty For Immigrants, Study Says

    Old-Age Benefits Have Dramatic Effect On Poverty For Immigrants, Study Says
    To qualify for the old-age payment, someone must live in Canada for at least 10 years after age 18, a prerequisite that means some immigrant seniors don't qualify.

    Old-Age Benefits Have Dramatic Effect On Poverty For Immigrants, Study Says

    U.S. Congress Has To Move On New Nafta, Trump Says Before Trudeau Meeting

    LONDON - U.S. President Donald Trump says his country's legislators have to ratify the new North American free-trade deal before Mexico and Canada lose interest in finalizing it.

    U.S. Congress Has To Move On New Nafta, Trump Says Before Trudeau Meeting