Ardent Victimization in the Somali/Muslim Community
Ardent Victimization in the Somali/Muslim Community
"We need to feel safe in our city. Change needs to happen, not empty gestures.""Enough is enough. The time is now. Justice may have been denied in the trial of the killer of Abdirahman Abdi, but we can still choose justice as a city and make community safer for us.""We need to stop sending untrained people with guns when our neighbours and loved ones are in crisis."IfrahYusuf, chair, Justice For Abdirahman Coalition"I don't mind screaming because we need to scream our voices very loud of [sic] what's been going on to our people.""We must come together. I'm going to say it as loud as I can: Their fists may beat us, their guns may kill us, but they will never, ever silence our voices. Our voices are the most powerful of tools and the most powerful of weapons ...""The killings of Indigenous peoples and Black people, it must stop."Claudette Commanda, Algonquin Anishinaabe, Kitigan Zibi First Nation
Black,
Muslim and Indigenous communities in Canada have forged a bond of
victimization. They hold the greater white community at fault for their
colonialist past and their current attitudes, citing them as being
racist and prejudiced against people of colour, against Islam, against
First Nations. These are groups within the larger society that see
themselves as vulnerable minorities whose rights and entitlements are
given short shrift, and who are constantly victims of an unjust legal
system.
What
they also have in common is that they frequently live at or below the
poverty line. As well, they tend to sequester themselves in deliberately
separated blocs, choosing not to integrate with the greater society. A
feeling of alienation, of victimhood and vulnerability to unfair
treatment and public condemnation is also shared between them. Needless
to say that in the greater society there are people living in poverty
who are not of colour, not representing any religion, and downtrodden
primarily because life has been unkind to them in the circumstances of
their lives. Including mental illness and substance dependency.
Another
issue both communities have in common is that of criminal activity
disproportionate to their share of numbers in the community. Gangs,
violence, weapons, smuggling, drug dealing, gang rivalry, and
intimidation of members of their own communities who fear reporting
their illegal and often violent behaviour for fear of retribution. Minor
details which keep police busy, involved in their duty to uphold the
law and ensure community safety.
Abdi
Abdirahman was a 37-year-old Somali refugee, living with his family in
Ottawa as a member of the extended Somali community. He had a mental
illness for which he received medical treatment as an out-patient and
was prescribed anti-psychotic medication to control his outbursts of
mental illness. It appears his family failed to agree with the medical
professionals who diagnosed, treated and prescribed medication for this
man, and they were successful in having that medication dropped as a
therapy to keep h8is mental instability in check.
One
day in July of 2016 Mr. Abdirahman went to a neighbourhood cafe as
apparently he often did. A busy place, there were many others at the
cafe and they were witness to his violently forcing himself on a few
women, one after another, at the cafe. One woman was so viciously
gripped by him that others present came to her rescue and with
difficulty detached him, escorting him out to the street. And there, on
the street was a young mother with an infant in a bicycle carrier who
had just stopped outside the cafe. His attention turned to her, in turn.
Police
had been called about the altercation, and one police officer arrived
in a police car and attempted to take Abdirahman into custody,
struggling to place him in handcuffs. Abdirahman picked up a 30-pound
road construction standard swinging it about wildly. Pepper spray failed
to stop him. He then sprinted toward the apartment where he lived
nearby with his family, the police officer in chase, having radioed for
help. When the first officer finally caught up with Abdirahman, again
struggling to place him in handcuffs, he was unable to overcome
Abdirahman's physical resistance.
A
second police officer soon arrived, appraised the situation, and added
his physical presence to the struggle where both officers together
appeared unable to overcome the resistance of the man in full psychotic
fervour. The second officer, Const.Daniel Montsion, hit Abdirahman
several times with his gloved hand in the face and on his thigh. Mr.
Abdirahman's nose was broken, and suddenly he became still and stopped
breathing. The two officers applied CPR attempting to restore him to
consciousness. When soon afterward responding paramedics arrived they
pronounced Mr. Abdirahman dead.
A
coroner's report pointed out that Mr.Abdirahman had died of a heart
attack. Brought on by the episode of psychotic attack, and that he had a
previously undiagnosed serious heart condition. Const.Montsion was
charged with manslaughter, aggravated assault and assault with a weapon (the police-force-issued reinforced gloves).
At his trial witnesses for the prosecution were found to have given
testimony that was contradicted by surveillance videos. Ontario Court
Justice Robert Kelly found Const.Montsion innocent of all charges after
taking all evidence and testimony into account.
But
some raucous members of the Ottawa-Somali community will not be
convinced that Const.Montsion is not a murderer and was simply
discharging his professional duty to the security and safety of the
public in extremely difficult circumstances. An ongoing saga of
victimization and blame has been released anew by the Justice for
Abdirahman Coalition which launched another protest through downtown
streets shouting "No justice, no peace", carrying placards and shouting "Black lives, they matter here" and "They say get back, we say fight back".
Traffic
was brought to a standstill by the march of several hundred people
while organizers unfurled yellow caution tape about the intersection.
And five demands were delivered through a megaphone announcement with
the coalition calling on the Ottawa Police Services board to freeze the
budget for police and city council to oppose any budget increase for
police so funding should instead be targeted for public health and
social services for the city's Black and indigenous communities.
They also called for "demonstrably racist, misogynist and/or violent officers"
to be fired, starting with Const.Montsion, including the Ottawa Police
Association president, along with other instructions to be fulfilled to
their satisfaction by the City of Ottawa. An alternative to a police
response to interventions with people in mental health crisis to be
immediately substituted. "No more deaths, fire OPS" was chanted by people in the crowd. "Defund the police", protesters shouted holding Black Lives Matter and Justice for Abdirahman banners.
Labels: Indigenous First Nations, Justice, Ottawa Police Services, Somali Community
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