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

    Open Data Is Now Available In Delta!

    Information such as election outcomes and property and utility related data is now freely available to the public, easy to access, and simple to reuse.

    Open Data Is Now Available In Delta!

    StatCan Overreached With Plans: Privacy Czar

    StatCan Overreached With Plans: Privacy Czar
    OTTAWA - The federal privacy watchdog says the national statistics agency could not justify plans to collect data about Canadians' financial transactions without their knowledge or consent.    

    StatCan Overreached With Plans: Privacy Czar

    One Year After Arrests, Canadians Held In China Set To Face Trial

    OTTAWA - Canada's justice minister says he is troubled that two Canadians detained in China have been denied access to lawyers as they face trials where convictions are virtually assured.    

    One Year After Arrests, Canadians Held In China Set To Face Trial

    Taxpayers' Watchdog Launches Probe Of Child Benefit Rules, Program

    Taxpayers' Watchdog Launches Probe Of Child Benefit Rules, Program
    Sherra Profit says in a statement today she continues to hear about challenges with how the Canada Child Benefit is administered despite raising the matter with the government and the Canada Revenue Agency.    

    Taxpayers' Watchdog Launches Probe Of Child Benefit Rules, Program

    Chrystia Freeland To Sign New NAFTA Deal With U.S., Mexico

    OTTAWA - An agreement has been reached on a North American free trade deal, with all three countries set to sign the agreement today.    

    Chrystia Freeland To Sign New NAFTA Deal With U.S., Mexico

    Ontario Man's Drug-Trafficking Case Tossed Over Road-Side Strip Search

    Ontario Man's Drug-Trafficking Case Tossed Over Road-Side Strip Search
    In his decision, Ontario Superior Court Justice Cary Boswell excluded incriminating evidence because officers violated Robert Cave's constitutional rights.

    Ontario Man's Drug-Trafficking Case Tossed Over Road-Side Strip Search