Thursday, April 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Police probing after abuse hurled at NDP's Singh

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 May, 2022 04:24 PM
  • Police probing after abuse hurled at NDP's Singh

OTTAWA - Police are investigating after a video circulated on social media showed people hurling verbal abuse at NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh during a protest in Peterborough, Ont., this week.

The federal NDP leader had dropped by the campaign office for Jen Deck, the Ontario NDP candidate for Peterborough-Kawartha in the provincial election, on Tuesday afternoon.

A video shows Singh encountering protesters as he left the campaign office, who can be heard shouting expletives at him and calling him a "traitor" as he gets inside a vehicle.

Tim Farquharson, the acting chief of the Peterborough Police Service, said Thursday that police are "actively investigating" after receiving a complaint.

"Anyone seeing the video should find it disheartening, morally unacceptable and lacking the respect each resident and visitor deserves," he said in a video posted to YouTube.

"Thank you to all who have stepped up to say that.

“To those involved in this incident and other forms of harassment, intimidation, and in some cases hate incidents or hate crimes in the communities we police, your actions and belief systems are reprehensible, unconscionable and in some cases criminal,” Farquharson said.

Police also encouraged anyone with more video or information to come forward.

Singh told reporters Thursday that he found the experience "intense, threatening (and) insulting" but that he is more worried about what it means for politics in general.

"It doesn't faze me, it doesn't shake me in any way, but I am worried about what that means for politics generally, what that means for people who want to participate and see something like that and then maybe think 'It's not a place for me,' and how we might miss out some incredible people who won't come forward and participate in politics," he said outside the House of Commons.

"I've experienced a lot of this kind of hatred and being physically attacked, even when I was younger, and I've learned to defend myself and taken martial arts, but that shouldn't be the requirement, that you've got to be physically fit and skilled in defending yourself to be a politician or a leader," he said.

"That to me is completely wrong and problematic and that's what I'm worried about."

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. home sales move back to normal: association

B.C. home sales move back to normal: association
The association has released the B.C. home sales figures for April, showing 8,939 properties changed hands last month, a decrease of 34.9 per cent from the record high set in April last year.

B.C. home sales move back to normal: association

Fatal flight was too heavy, Toronto-bound: Witness

Fatal flight was too heavy, Toronto-bound: Witness
The woman, who asked not to be identified because she was afraid for her safety, said she spoke with pilot Abhinav Handa at the Boundary Bay Airport in Delta, B.C., before his plane took off on the cross-country trip in late April.

Fatal flight was too heavy, Toronto-bound: Witness

Talks break off in Sea-to-Sky transit dispute

Talks break off in Sea-to-Sky transit dispute
Talks on Wednesday between Unifor Local 114 and BC Transit contractor PW Transit were the first in weeks, prompting hopes of movement in the job action that began three-and-half months ago.

Talks break off in Sea-to-Sky transit dispute

Police seize ammunition, over $1400 in cash, and 550 grams of suspected fentanyl

Police seize ammunition, over $1400 in cash, and 550 grams of suspected fentanyl
During the investigation, officers located a handgun, ammunition, $1,455 in Canadian currency, 550 grams of suspected fentanyl, 140 grams of suspected methamphetamine, 18 grams of suspected crack cocaine and 45 grams of unknown pills. 

Police seize ammunition, over $1400 in cash, and 550 grams of suspected fentanyl

B.C. politician pops question while in legislature

B.C. politician pops question while in legislature
Glumac, the member for Port Moody-Coquitlam, stood in the legislature to acknowledge all the partners who support the unique work that politicians in the legislature do, saying it certainly isn’t a normal job.

B.C. politician pops question while in legislature

B.C. man not criminally responsible in mom's death

B.C. man not criminally responsible in mom's death
Justice Geoffrey Gomery says in his ruling that Webster had suffered from schizophrenia for years and bludgeoned his sleeping mother because he believed family members wanted to kill him and steal the inheritance he had received from his grandmother.

B.C. man not criminally responsible in mom's death

PrevNext