Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Visible Minorities Feel Less Safe Than Other Canadians: Statistics Canada

Darpan News Desk, 12 Dec, 2017 02:14 PM
    MONTREAL — Visible minorities, particularly Arabs and West Asians, feel less safe walking alone in their neighbourhoods after dark than do other Canadians, according to a Statistics Canada survey released Tuesday.
     
    The study was conducted with data collected in 2014.
     
    Forty-four per cent of respondents who identified themselves as belonging to a visible minority group said they felt "very safe" walking home alone after dark, versus 54 per cent for other Canadians.
     
    Stats Can noted that the majority of visible minorities in the country live in large cities, "where feelings of safety are relatively low."
     
    "Yet even after taking into account where they lived, visible minorities remained less likely to report feeling safe than their non-visible minorities counterparts," the agency said.
     
     
    Out of all the visible minority groups in the country, Arab and West Asian respondents were the most likely to say they felt unsafe.
     
    Fifteen per cent of Arab respondents said they did not feel safe walking alone as did 16 per cent of West Asians.
     
    "This marks a change when compared with perceptions of personal safety 10 years earlier, when the sense of safety felt by Arabs and West Asians was comparable to that of other visible minorities," the report said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Air Canada To Launch Its Own Loyalty Rewards Program In 2020 To Replace Aeroplan

    TORONTO — Air Canada said Thursday it will launch its own loyalty rewards plan in 2020 and not renew its contract with the company running Aeroplan, sending Aimia's stock plummeting by more than 50 per cent and angering some points collectors.

    Air Canada To Launch Its Own Loyalty Rewards Program In 2020 To Replace Aeroplan

    Four Killed, 2 Injured In Seven-Vehicle Collision On Highway 401, Northeast Of Kingston, Ont.

    Four Killed, 2 Injured In Seven-Vehicle Collision On Highway 401, Northeast Of Kingston, Ont.
    KINGSTON, Ont. — A seven-vehicle crash along a stretch of one of Canada's busiest highways has left four people dead and sent two others to hospital, police said Thursday.

    Four Killed, 2 Injured In Seven-Vehicle Collision On Highway 401, Northeast Of Kingston, Ont.

    Man, 34, Dead After Construction Site Accident In West Vancouver

    Man, 34, Dead After Construction Site Accident In West Vancouver
    Man, 34, dead after construction site accident in West Vancouver - Incident happened at a work site just off Cypress Bowl Road, say police

    Man, 34, Dead After Construction Site Accident In West Vancouver

    Young Girls Pressured To Send Nudes, Unaware Boys Were Sharing Them, Court Told

    Young Girls Pressured To Send Nudes, Unaware Boys Were Sharing Them, Court Told
    Girls as young as 13 felt pressured to send intimate photos and were unaware they were being shared among a group of boys, a Nova Scotia court has been told.

    Young Girls Pressured To Send Nudes, Unaware Boys Were Sharing Them, Court Told

    WATCH: Canada Post Unveils Stamp Celebrating Same-Sex Marriage Rights In Country

    WATCH: Canada Post Unveils Stamp Celebrating Same-Sex Marriage Rights In Country
    TORONTO — The latest Canada Post stamp commemorating Canada's 150th birthday pays tribute to the fact that same-sex couples have the right to get married in this country.

    WATCH: Canada Post Unveils Stamp Celebrating Same-Sex Marriage Rights In Country

    Deputy Ontario NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Dhaliwal To Run For Federal Leadership

    Deputy Ontario NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Dhaliwal To Run For Federal Leadership
    Jagmeet Singh, 38, Is A Lawyer And Deputy Leader Of The Ontario NDP. He Speaks French And Punjabi And Has Represented A Brampton Riding In The Provincial Legislature Since 2011

    Deputy Ontario NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Dhaliwal To Run For Federal Leadership