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

    28-Yr-Old Rohtak Woman Gets 7-year Jail For False Gangrape Complaint

    28-Yr-Old Rohtak Woman Gets 7-year Jail For False Gangrape Complaint
    The woman, Meenakshi, 28, had in June 2010 filed a complaint alleging she was gangraped by a Rohtak resident and his two brother-in-laws after they gave her lift in their car.

    28-Yr-Old Rohtak Woman Gets 7-year Jail For False Gangrape Complaint

    Search On For B.C. Fire Chief Who May Have Been Swept Away In Swollen Creek

    Search On For B.C. Fire Chief Who May Have Been Swept Away In Swollen Creek
    CACHE CREEK, B.C. — The RCMP says the fire chief of Cache Creek in British Columbia's Interior is missing and may have been swept away in a swollen creek.

    Search On For B.C. Fire Chief Who May Have Been Swept Away In Swollen Creek

    17-Year-Old Youth Injured In Multi-Vehicle Collision In Surrey Dies

    17-Year-Old Youth Injured In Multi-Vehicle Collision In Surrey Dies
    Police say he was one of three people hurt in two separate collisions on 64th Avenue on Wednesday night.

    17-Year-Old Youth Injured In Multi-Vehicle Collision In Surrey Dies

    Surrey Drug Bust Results In 13 Arrests, Seizure Of Handguns And Crossbows

    Surrey Drug Bust Results In 13 Arrests, Seizure Of Handguns And Crossbows
    Surrey RCMP advises that multiple search warrants were executed in mid-April at properties alleged to be involved in the street level drug trade. 

    Surrey Drug Bust Results In 13 Arrests, Seizure Of Handguns And Crossbows

    British Columbia Court Says Invermere Mayor Gerry Taft Must Pay $75,000 For Defamation

    British Columbia Court Says Invermere Mayor Gerry Taft Must Pay $75,000 For Defamation
    Justice Gary Weatherill ruled Gerry Taft defamed Devin Kazakoff when he called him a convicted felon who had extreme positions on animal rights issues on a website based in Cranbrook, B.C.

    British Columbia Court Says Invermere Mayor Gerry Taft Must Pay $75,000 For Defamation

    Storms, Spring Runoff Combine To Cause Washouts, Raise Flood Risk In B.C.

    Environment Canada has posted severe thunderstorm watches for a large section of British Columbia's central and southern Interior, an area that is already seeing spring flooding.

    Storms, Spring Runoff Combine To Cause Washouts, Raise Flood Risk In B.C.