Latest News Roundup - June 2010
Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Video: Toronto police chief Bill Blair heckled at Pride party

Most reporters were asked to leave Tuesday night's Toronto police Pride reception at The 519, but we caught the protest on camera. Watch below:


Read more about the event, and what went on inside, in the written account that we posted last night

CP24 caught a quick comment from Blair as he left the event. The reporter asked Blair why the protesters were angry, to which Blair replied "Frankly, I don't know and I'm not sure I care."

(Toronto police chief Bill Blair is heckled by queer protesters as he enters The 519 on June 29. Photo by Matt Mills)

Meanwhile, another rally is planned for Canada Day:
 
Queen's Park (in front of the legislature)

 

Read more:

 


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Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Pride Toronto, Toronto Police cocktail party turns ugly

BY MARCUS MCCANN – A 4:30pm cocktail appearance by Toronto police chief Bill Blair quickly became a heated standoff on June 29.

Check out our picture gallery here.

Watch our video report:


Organizers kept gay and trans people out of the 519 Community Centre auditorium for more than two hours — and periodically ejected people from inside. For the first hour, those who were forbidden from entry stayed outside.

Pride Toronto executive director Tracey Sandilands came out to speak to the crowds, which spilled onto the street. She reminded protesters that the event was organized by Toronto Police — not Pride Toronto — and said that they were dealing with capacity issues.

She was heckled by people on the street. Later, organizers said that Pride Toronto was complicit in the "pinkwashing" of Toronto Police.

519 executive director Maura Lawless also spoke briefly, saying that she hoped to host a discussion between queers and cops soon.

One protester shouted, “But we’re here now!”

Bill Blair arrived in a dark SUV around 5:30 to chants of "Shame! Shame! Shame!" Police officers forcibly parted the crowd to make way for Blair to enter through the front door, where the protesters were. Two other doors stood empty and unlocked.

After Blair went in, queers occupied the lobby. They chanted and shouted to disrupt the ceremony happening on the second floor.

“No justice. No peace. No homophobic police,” became a popular chant, as did, “No photo ops with the fucking cops.”
 
The mood of the auditorium was strained. Those who were allowed in the auditorium -- and allowed to stay -- included city councillor Kyle Rae, lawyer Douglas Elliott, Egale Canada's Helen Kennedy and former Proud FM staffer Deb Pearce. Attendance inside the auditorium peeked at 75, while a meeting in the same space drew 400 earlier in the month.




Xtra shot video of the protests after videographer Brent Creelman was ejected from the auditorium

 

BY MATT MILLS  - Meanwhile, as about 75 participants gathered inside, police moved to eject one person who called "Shame!" as the first speaker stepped to the mic. Police and 519 staff also asked some media to leave the room. Some stayed, some went. I stayed.

Word spread that a crowd, gathering on the sidewalk, was being denied entry to the building. Some chose to leave the reception to join the crowd outside. There were about 20 police officers in attendance altogether. The 519's Matthew Cutler told me that as far as he was concerned, the building was open for regular programs, that only the auditorium was invite-only because it had been rented to police. The south door of the building was open for those accessing other programs. 

There were many familiar faces in the room. Among them were city councillor Kyle Rae, Pride Toronto co-chair Genevieve D'Iorio, city council candidate Ken Chan, lawyer Douglas Elliott, Egale executive director and Pride Toronto board member Helen Kennedy, city council candidate Enza Anderson, Pride Toronto executive director Tracey Sandilands, several 519 staffers and board members, a few media and several more community members. There was also a group of police officers from Montenegro. They clustered togther in the centre of the room looking at times a little bewildered and bored. 

Blair arrived at the front door and pushed through the jeering crowd. He turned briefly and tipped his hat as he entered. The first to greet him was The 519's Helen Rykens. Rykens told Blair that police needed to let people into the building. "I disagree," said Blair before he turned away and was escorted up the stairs to the auditorium. 

He worked the room briefly as Rae and Elliott made speeches. As Blair was introduced and took position at the mic, one person in the crowd surged forward to challenge him about the conduct of Toronto Police over the past weekend. "My friends were arrested for no reason," she called. Blair stood silently at the podium as she was gently escorted from the room by 519 staffers. It was a courageous, gut-wrenching moment.

As Blair took to the mic, one person stepped forward to challenge him.  

Blair said to the room, "So how was your weekend?"

Filmmaker Malcolm Ingram replied, "I was detained."

"Well my weekend was better than yours I guess, my friend," said Blair to nervous laughter. 

He delivered a canned speech extolling the great relationship the Toronto Police has with Toronto's gay and lesbian communities.

Meanwhile, 519 staff had convinced police to let people standing on the sidewalk into the lobby of The 519. People chanted as the reception resumed. There were a couple of musical numbers.... backed by a chorus of chants heard easily from the lobby of the building. It was surreal. 

By this time, most had already left the auditorium. At about 6:30 pm, the scheduled end of the event, Blair left the way he came in. Police stood between him and the crowd in the lobby as he left. As soon as he was gone, the crowd dispersed, leaving not so much as a piece of garbage.


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Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Weapons? They were supposed to be decorative.

Police Chief Bill Blair used a cache of household items seized over the weekend to justify the force with which they disrupted protests. Prominent among the “potential weapons” were bamboo poles, the CBC reports.

But poles confiscated by police were never intended as weapons, their owners say. Had they not been confiscated, they would have been used to fly Pride flags at a picnic in Cawthra Park.

Michael Went and Doug Kerr say they were on their way to Oasis, a low-key gay picnic intended to celebrate the anniversary of Stonewall.

The couple say they took the poles from planters in their condo, where they were being used decoratively.

On the morning of Sunday, June 27, they were preparing to bike from their place at College and Spadina to Cawthra Park, in Toronto’s Church-Wellesley neighbourhood.

Went says that a man warned the pair that police were confiscating anything that could be used as a weapon.



“Within a minute, two police officers arrived,” and asked to take the poles, says Went. Neither he nor Kerr resisted the seizure.

Went says he finds it “shocking” that the seizure would be used to justify police conduct, since “I never, ever thought of them as weapons.”

Even so, they’re taking things in stride.

“How am I supposed to get my bamboo poles back?” Kerr asks.

(Photo: people at a civil liberties march in Toronto on June 28. About 2,000 showed up to protest police overreach.)

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Tuesday, June 29, 2010

One more Queen at Pride?

That’s right, the Queen of England will be in Toronto on July 4 — the day of the country’s biggest Pride parade. As the head of state for Canada, she’ll be having an official state dinner with Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper. We suspect that she’d rather be hanging out with the homos on Church St. And honey, if you’re reading this, you’re more than welcome to join us.


(Photo from wiki commons; h/t to Ryan G Hinds)

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Monday, June 28, 2010

G20 security state madness

I don't even know where to begin on the events of this past weekend.

How about here? An account by this dude of appalling treatment by police. It's a tale of unwarranted search and detention, segregation by sexual orientation and suspension of fundamental rights as Canadians. Welcome to Toronto, Dan. This piece brought to you by the good people at rabble.ca 

 

I was at College and University, the southern boundary of Queen's Park, at about 5pm on Saturday as police began to clear the so-called free-speech zone. It was appalling. I watched as a few were arrested and saw mounted police carve a group of people out of the crowd in the park and arrest them all.  

Fab magazine associate editor Matt Thomas snapped this shot on Queen St W. You know the story.  

  

Read Thomas's account of Saturday's events.  

Tonight, there's a protest planned at the Toronto Police Services headquarters at Yonge and College, starting at 5:30pm. See more info on Facebook

A Facebook group has also sprung up: Canadians Demanding a Public Inquiry into Toronto G20.


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