Justin Trudeau takes a knee but is silent on reforms to policing
Justin Trudeau took a knee in solidarity with
anti-racism demonstrators on Friday, but remained silent at the event as his
government faces questions over how it plans to address police violence.
Wearing a black mask and surrounded by bodyguards,
the Canadian prime minister made a surprise appearance at the No justice = No
peace rally in Ottawa.
After he knelt with protesters, a number of
attendees thanked him for the gesture. But, for others, Trudeau’s actions rang
hollow.
“I’m not interested in bullshit publicity stunts,
especially now,” said Andray Domise, a Toronto-based writer. “How the hell can
you kneel against police brutality? When everything in your record indicates
you have no problem with it. It boggles the mind to watch him turn to the camera
– almost like he was confirming that he was being filmed – and kneeling.”
The prime minister has previously received criticism
for attending demonstrations. In September he joined a climate rally in
Montreal, even though his government has been widely criticised by activists
for bailing out a contentious pipeline expansion project.
Earlier in the day, Trudeau acknowledged the country
had problems within its policing systems, following a number of violent
incidents – including the killing of Chantel Moore, a 26-year-old Indigenous
woman shot dead by police early on Thursday morning.
“Far too many Canadians feel fear and anxiety at the
sight of law enforcement officers,” Trudeau told reporters. “Over the past
weeks, we’ve seen a large number of Canadians suddenly awaken to the fact that
the discrimination that is a lived reality for far too many of our fellow
citizens is something that needs to end.”
Reporters asked Trudeau to name specific policy
changes his government would implement, and if he believed police officers in
Canada were racist, but he declined to answer either question directly.
Earlier in the day, Indigenous Services minister
Marc Miller condemned Moore’s killing. “I’m pissed. I’m outraged. There needs
to be a full accounting of what has gone on,” he said. This is a pattern that
keeps repeating itself.”
The march in Ottawa, attended by thousands, followed
days of protest over police brutality and racism across the US, prompted by the
police killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, and the murder of Ahmaud
Arbery.
But activists pointed out that Canada had its own
problems with race and policing: black residents of Toronto are 20 times as
likely to be shot dead as white residents.
At a march in Toronto on Friday, the city’s police
chief, Mark Saunders, also took a knee with other officers near police
headquarters.
The city’s police service has come under fire in
recent days, after a woman fell to her death following a police response to a
mental health emergency. In light of the incident, which police are prohibited
from speaking about, Saunders has pledged to expedite the rollout of body
cameras on officers.
The incident closely mirrored an event in the city
of London, Ontario last month, when the mother of 27-year-old Caleb Tubila
Njoko called police for help after her son displayed erratic behaviour. Police
arrived at the apartment and her son fell from the balcony. He died three days
later.




