Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Visible Minorities Feel Less Safe Than Other Canadians: Statistics Canada

Darpan News Desk, 12 Dec, 2017 02:14 PM
    MONTREAL — Visible minorities, particularly Arabs and West Asians, feel less safe walking alone in their neighbourhoods after dark than do other Canadians, according to a Statistics Canada survey released Tuesday.
     
    The study was conducted with data collected in 2014.
     
    Forty-four per cent of respondents who identified themselves as belonging to a visible minority group said they felt "very safe" walking home alone after dark, versus 54 per cent for other Canadians.
     
    Stats Can noted that the majority of visible minorities in the country live in large cities, "where feelings of safety are relatively low."
     
    "Yet even after taking into account where they lived, visible minorities remained less likely to report feeling safe than their non-visible minorities counterparts," the agency said.
     
     
    Out of all the visible minority groups in the country, Arab and West Asian respondents were the most likely to say they felt unsafe.
     
    Fifteen per cent of Arab respondents said they did not feel safe walking alone as did 16 per cent of West Asians.
     
    "This marks a change when compared with perceptions of personal safety 10 years earlier, when the sense of safety felt by Arabs and West Asians was comparable to that of other visible minorities," the report said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Port Moody Woman Sentenced To Two Weeks In Jail After Spitting In Bus Driver's Face

    Port Moody Woman Sentenced To Two Weeks In Jail After Spitting In Bus Driver's Face
    A Provincial Court Judge has sent a strong message to those who would assault a bus operator in his sentencing of a 22 year old Port Moody woman.

    Port Moody Woman Sentenced To Two Weeks In Jail After Spitting In Bus Driver's Face

    Homeless Chilliwack Woman Critically Injured After Tent Catches Fire

    Homeless Chilliwack Woman Critically Injured After Tent Catches Fire
    VANCOUVER — A fire that left a woman with serious injuries has raised concerns about safety for homeless people as temperatures dip in British Columbia's Lower Mainland.

    Homeless Chilliwack Woman Critically Injured After Tent Catches Fire

    Man Charged After Holding Truck Driver At Gunpoint For Several Hours In B.C. Interior

    Man Charged After Holding Truck Driver At Gunpoint For Several Hours In B.C. Interior
    The 43-year-old Alberta trucker spent three-hours driving along a B.C. highway Monday after an assailant came to his window, waving a handgun, demanding that Price drive him away from the turnout in the road where Price had been taking a break.

    Man Charged After Holding Truck Driver At Gunpoint For Several Hours In B.C. Interior

    Charges Laid, Motive Still Unclear In Vancouver Double Homicide: Police Chief

    Charges Laid, Motive Still Unclear In Vancouver Double Homicide: Police Chief
    Chief Const. Adam Palmer said 25-year-old Rocky Kam remains in custody after being charged with two counts of second-degree murder in the deaths of Dianna Mah-Jones and Richard Jones on Sept. 27.

    Charges Laid, Motive Still Unclear In Vancouver Double Homicide: Police Chief

    Police Say B.C. Farm Search Continues Despite Removal Of Shelters, Equipment

    Police Say B.C. Farm Search Continues Despite Removal Of Shelters, Equipment
    SALMON ARM , B.C. — Temporary shelters and heavy equipment have been removed from a British Columbia farm where the remains of an 18-year-old woman were found.

    Police Say B.C. Farm Search Continues Despite Removal Of Shelters, Equipment

    Small Knives Will Be Allowed On Planes, But Baby Powder Banned: Transport Canada

    Small Knives Will Be Allowed On Planes, But Baby Powder Banned: Transport Canada
     Under new regulation changes effective later this month, airline passengers will be able to carry some small knives on most flights, but baby powder will be banned.

    Small Knives Will Be Allowed On Planes, But Baby Powder Banned: Transport Canada