Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Chinese Canadians Warn Against A Repeat Of The Racism They Faced During SARS

The Canadian Press, 29 Jan, 2020 09:25 PM

    TORONTO - Members of Toronto's Chinese community say the racism they experienced during the SARS epidemic must not be repeated during the current outbreak of a new form of coronavirus.

     

    The cautions came at a news conference in Toronto where community leaders and local politicians sounded the alarm about a rising tide of anti-Chinese sentiment in light of the outbreak.

     

    The head of one legal clinic serving the city's Asian community says she recalls seeing Chinese tenants evicted in 2003 over unfounded fears that they were carrying SARS, a respiratory illness from the same family of viruses as the current coronavirus.

     

    Civic leaders say such attitudes have no place in the city and warn members of the community are more likely to be harmed by racist attitudes than to contract the coronavirus.

     

    The two confirmed cases of the virus discovered so far in Ontario involve a married couple living in Toronto, while a presumtive case has been reported in British Columbia.

     

    The virus has sickened nearly 6,000 people and killed more than 130 in China, but has not been declared an international emergency by international health authorities.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Appeal Of Convicted Calgary Triple-Murderer Douglas Garland Denied

    Appeal Of Convicted Calgary Triple-Murderer Douglas Garland Denied
    CALGARY - Alberta's top court has dismissed an appeal filed by a man found guilty of killing a Calgary couple and their grandson.    

    Appeal Of Convicted Calgary Triple-Murderer Douglas Garland Denied

    Feds Approve Alberta's Carbon Tax On Big Industrial Emitters

    Feds Approve Alberta's Carbon Tax On Big Industrial Emitters
    OTTAWA - The federal government is giving the Alberta government a passing grade for its industrial carbon tax.    

    Feds Approve Alberta's Carbon Tax On Big Industrial Emitters

    Drug Deaths Down But Coroner Says Thousands Still Overdosing In B.C.

    The BC Coroners Service says there were 69 suspected overdoses deaths in October, a 42 per cent decrease from those killed by illicit drugs in the same month last year.

    Drug Deaths Down But Coroner Says Thousands Still Overdosing In B.C.

    Parliament Reflects On Anti-Woman Violence As MPs Mark Massacre Anniversary

    Parliament Reflects On Anti-Woman Violence As MPs Mark Massacre Anniversary
    On the evening of Dec. 6, 1989, a gunman entered Montreal's Ecole polytechnique, killing 14 women in an anti-feminist mass slaying before taking his own life.

    Parliament Reflects On Anti-Woman Violence As MPs Mark Massacre Anniversary

    Metro Vancouver Transit Workers Ratify Deal With Coast Mountain Bus Company

    Members of Unifor Locals 111 and 2200 voted on the agreement Thursday night.    

    Metro Vancouver Transit Workers Ratify Deal With Coast Mountain Bus Company

    B.C. To Eliminate Medical Services Plan Premiums Not Paid By Residents Elsewhere

    British Columbians will ring in the new year by joining all Canadians in not paying monthly rates for health care.

    B.C. To Eliminate Medical Services Plan Premiums Not Paid By Residents Elsewhere