Tuesday, February 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Three Ontario Sisters Stopped By Police For Biking Topless Demand An Apology

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jul, 2015 12:36 PM
    Three sisters in Ontario are demanding an apology from a police officer who they said stopped the women as they were riding their bicycles topless and told them to cover up.
     
    Alysha Brilla, a Juno-nominated musician and women's rights advocate, said the incident happened last Friday when she and her two sisters — Tameera and Nadia Mohamed — were biking late in the evening down a quiet street in Kitchener.
     
    A police officer driving by in an SUV saw the women, rolled down his window and told them they needed to put shirts on because it was the law, Brilla said.
     
    The 26-year-old said she pointed out that the officer was wrong about the law and then started filming the interaction on her cellphone. The officer backtracked by saying he only wanted to check if the women had proper bells and lights on their bicycles, Brilla said.
     
    When the sisters were told they were free to go, they headed for the police station to complain about the incident. 
     
    "When my sisters and I were biking down the road we weren't like, 'Woohoo, look at our tits!' No. Just like male riders, we have these benign fat deposits with nipples on our chests," Brilla said. "The social context is obviously different, but that's what we're trying to shift."
     
     
    Brilla said she and her sisters have seen plenty of male cyclists going shirtless on hot summer days. Women should feel free to do the same without attracting attention or being harassed and questioned, she said.
     
    A similar incident in June garnered headlines after eight-year-old Marlee McLean was told by city staff in Guelph, Ont. to cover up while she was in a wading pool wearing only a swim bottom.
     
    Ontario women have had the right to go topless in public since 1996, five years after Guelph university student Gwen Jacobs was charged for committing an indecent act when she walked home shirtless on a hot day.
     
    The Kitchener Ont., sisters are filing a formal complaint with the Waterloo Regional Police, but Brilla said she only wants an apology and to ensure officers are properly educated on the law. The Waterloo Regional Police did not respond to a request for comment.
     
    The women are also organizing a rally, called Bare With Us, which they hope will help educate the public on the women's right to be topless, but also broader issues such as women's pay inequity and safety.
     
     
    Tameera Mohamed said everyone is welcomed to attend the rally at noon on Saturday in the Waterloo Town Square, including police officers.
     
    "One of the aims of the rally is to desensitize people to the female breast in a non-sexual context so that people can disassociate breasts from sexuality,"

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec's Newest Millionaires: Group Of 20 People From Montreal Area Shares $55-Million Jackpot

    Quebec's Newest Millionaires: Group Of 20 People From Montreal Area Shares $55-Million Jackpot
    The $55-million prize is the most money the provincial gaming authority has ever distributed. The Lotto Max prize is a Canada-wide lottery that is held every Friday.

    Quebec's Newest Millionaires: Group Of 20 People From Montreal Area Shares $55-Million Jackpot

    Most Canadian Toddlers Vaccinated Against Key Childhood Diseases: Statistics Canada

    Most Canadian Toddlers Vaccinated Against Key Childhood Diseases: Statistics Canada
    The 2013 Childhood National Immunization Coverage Survey found 89 per cent of two-year-old children had received the recommended number of immunizations against measles, mumps and rubella.

    Most Canadian Toddlers Vaccinated Against Key Childhood Diseases: Statistics Canada

    Provinces, Territories On Unsustainable Fiscal Path As Health Costs Rise: Report

    Provinces, Territories On Unsustainable Fiscal Path As Health Costs Rise: Report
    OTTAWA — A new report is warning that the net debt of the country's provinces, territories and municipalities is on an unsustainable path with health spending set to accelerate along with the aging population.

    Provinces, Territories On Unsustainable Fiscal Path As Health Costs Rise: Report

    Nothing Wrong With NDP Byelection Mailings, Elections Watchdog Says

    OTTAWA — The commissioner of elections has cleared the federal NDP of any wrongdoing related to mass mailings sent into four ridings in the midst of byelections in 2013.

    Nothing Wrong With NDP Byelection Mailings, Elections Watchdog Says

    Horse Racing Community Steps Up To Support Injured Winnipeg Jockey Alyssa Selman

    Horse Racing Community Steps Up To Support Injured Winnipeg Jockey Alyssa Selman
    Alyssa Selman, 29, told CTV Winnipeg on Monday that she is making "good progress" even though she has been told she has only a five per cent chance of ever walking again.

    Horse Racing Community Steps Up To Support Injured Winnipeg Jockey Alyssa Selman

    Pierre Poilievre Criticized For Announcing Child Tax Benefits Wearing Conservative Party Logo

    Pierre Poilievre Criticized For Announcing Child Tax Benefits Wearing Conservative Party Logo
    The employment minister donned the blue shirt with the party crest in Halifax as he kicked off a national effort to tout $3 billion in benefit payments being sent out to families.

    Pierre Poilievre Criticized For Announcing Child Tax Benefits Wearing Conservative Party Logo