Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Woman Charged After Racial Slurs Hurled At Indian-Origin Man Following Edmonton Parking Dispute

Darpan News Desk, 26 Sep, 2018 12:40 PM
    A 44-year-old Edmonton woman who was captured on camera shouting racist slurs and mocking an Indian-origin man’s accent over a parking dispute has been now charged.
     
     
    Rahul Kumar, an HR professional who moved from India to Canada seven years ago, filmed the encounter outside his home on his cellphone last week, CTV reported on Tuesday.
     
     
    In the video, the woman who later identified herself as Angelique, was seen unleashing verbal tirade at Kumar over the parking issue.
     
     
    "You can film all you want Paki. Yes Paki, that's you with the sh*t-coloured skin," she was heard yelling at him from the driver's seat of her car.
     
     
    WARNING: Offensive language.
     
     
     
    The woman who made the comments called CTV Edmonton after the report aired and criticised the coverage, saying that she is “not a racist”.
     
     
    Asked whether the parking disagreement justifies the racist language used, she said, “It doesn’t matter if it justifies it or not; it happened and that’s where I took it.” She is unapologetic. “I have no problem with what happened,” she was quoted as saying by the report.
     
     
    At one point, she mocked Kumar's accent and said: "F***ing East Indian Paki bulls**t... Go back to your f***ing country, man."
     
     
    Then she can be seen driving off, but not before spitting on Kumar's car and calling him a "loser".
     
     
    Kumar said arguments happen, but racial insults are never justified.
     
     
    On Sept. 15, Angelique Denise Barfield, 44, was charged with causing a disturbance and mischief – obstruct lawful use of property. She was released on a promise to appear. The incident was initially being investigated as a hate crime, but Sgt. Gary Willits said there wasn’t enough evidence to suggest the incident was motivated by hate.
     
     
    Photo: CTV Video

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Appeal Court Rules Lottery Winner Must Be Paid Back $600,000 Loan

    B.C. Appeal Court Rules Lottery Winner Must Be Paid Back $600,000 Loan
    A dispute over whether $600,000 was a loan or a gift from a lottery winner has been settled by the British Columbia Court of Appeal in favour of the gambler.

    B.C. Appeal Court Rules Lottery Winner Must Be Paid Back $600,000 Loan

    How Weekend-Only Jail Sentences Can Cause Security Risks, Overcrowding

    How Weekend-Only Jail Sentences Can Cause Security Risks, Overcrowding
    Every Friday, large numbers of people across Canada are obligated to report to the same place for the weekend: jail.

    How Weekend-Only Jail Sentences Can Cause Security Risks, Overcrowding

    Judge Hands B.C. Inmate Two-Year Sentence For 'Unprovoked' Attack On Guard

    Judge Hands B.C. Inmate Two-Year Sentence For 'Unprovoked' Attack On Guard
    An inmate at a jail in British Columbia has been handed a two-year sentence for what a judge described as an unprovoked attack on a guard.

    Judge Hands B.C. Inmate Two-Year Sentence For 'Unprovoked' Attack On Guard

    Bills For Justin Trudeau's Nine-Day Troubled Trip To India Now Top $1.5 Million, Documents Show

    Bills For Justin Trudeau's Nine-Day Troubled Trip To India Now Top $1.5 Million, Documents Show
     New documents suggest the bills for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's troubledtrip to India in February exceed $1.5 million.

    Bills For Justin Trudeau's Nine-Day Troubled Trip To India Now Top $1.5 Million, Documents Show

    Toronto's Huge Pride Parade Slated For Sunday; Police Still Shut Out

    Toronto's Huge Pride Parade Slated For Sunday; Police Still Shut Out
    The huge Pride Parade, one of the country's most colourful and flamboyant outdoor events, will see more than 120 groups march the downtown route — but uniformed police won't be among them.

    Toronto's Huge Pride Parade Slated For Sunday; Police Still Shut Out

    Lightning Sparks More Than 100 Wildfires In B.C., With Further Storms Expected

    The B.C. Wildfire Service says more than 100 new blazes started after lightning storms rolled across the province Wednesday.

    Lightning Sparks More Than 100 Wildfires In B.C., With Further Storms Expected