Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Turban Ripped Off ‘Without Provocation', Abbotsford-Based Sikh Man Sues RCMP For Insulting His Religious Beliefs

Darpan News Desk , 28 Jun, 2019 09:46 PM

    An Abbotsford-based Sikh man in his late 30s is suing Surrey RCMP ripping off his turban while he was being held in a cell at a local detachment.


    According to a claim filed in the BC Supreme Court, Kanwaljit Singh claims he has suffered beyond injury from the incident.


    The Abbotsford software programmer's statement of claim says "suddenly without provocation or justification" an officer he understood to be Sgt. Brian Blair "approached the plaintiff and ripped the turban off of his head," then threw the turban onto the booking desk.


    Singh was the only prisoner during the afternoon on June 30, 2017, to be in the booking area of the jail. At the time, he was in the presence of four to five cops.


    Right after, Blair and three or four officers allegedly grabbed Singh and marched him out of the booking area to the holding cell, where Singh's arms were twisted behind his back.


    The lawsuit says, “Sgt. Blair intended his forceful removal of the plaintiff's turban and his pulling of the plaintiff's hair to be insulting to the plaintiff's religious beliefs," it says.


    Singh also says he is a devout Sikh who wears a turban as part of his religious practice and a core part of his identity. He claims to have suffered injury to his dignity, loss of self-respect, embarrassment, stress and anxiety. He's seeking damages and a declaration that his charter rights were breached.

     

    Kanwaljit Singh immigrated to Canada in 2006, according to the claim.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Court Ruling Expands Alberta's Blood Reserve, Canada's Largest

    Canada's largest Indigenous reserve is about to get larger.

    Court Ruling Expands Alberta's Blood Reserve, Canada's Largest

    Man Faces Charges After Car Slams Into Quebec Office Helping Flood Victims

    Man Faces Charges After Car Slams Into Quebec Office Helping Flood Victims
    STE-MARTHE-SUR-LE-LAC, Que. — Police say a man who allegedly drove his vehicle into an office that was helping flood victims will face charges of dangerous driving and assault with a weapon.    

    Man Faces Charges After Car Slams Into Quebec Office Helping Flood Victims

    Canada May Need Additional Carbon Taxes To Meet Its Paris Targets, PBO Says

    Canada May Need Additional Carbon Taxes To Meet Its Paris Targets, PBO Says
    Canada's price on carbon will have to be five times what it is now if the country is to reach its Paris Agreement greenhouse-gas emissions targets just by charging for those emissions, Parliament's budget watchdog says.    

    Canada May Need Additional Carbon Taxes To Meet Its Paris Targets, PBO Says

    House Of Commons Unanimously Adopts New Parental-Leave Policy For MPs

    House Of Commons Unanimously Adopts New Parental-Leave Policy For MPs
    For the first time ever, members of Parliament will have the right to take parental leave from their jobs on Parliament Hill when they have or adopt a new baby.

    House Of Commons Unanimously Adopts New Parental-Leave Policy For MPs

    'Love Wins:' How N.S. Town Collaborated To Protect Kidnapped Women In Africa

    Simple signs with a pair of blue hearts capture a small town's sentiments over the rescue of two young Maritime women from kidnappers in Ghana.

    'Love Wins:' How N.S. Town Collaborated To Protect Kidnapped Women In Africa

    After Partisan Bickering, House Backs Motion To End Veterans Homelessness

    OTTAWA — The House of Commons has backed a backbench MP's bid to have the government work to end veterans homelessness after days of partisan bickering over the fate of the private motion.

    After Partisan Bickering, House Backs Motion To End Veterans Homelessness