Ontario Human Rights Commission unveils new policy to tackle racial profiling
VAUGHAN, Ont. — Police officers who are guilty of race-based discrimination should face disciplinary measures that include firing, the Ontario Human Rights Commission said on Friday as it released the country’s first policy on racial profiling.
Profiling by law enforcement is profoundly harmful to black, Indigenous, and other racialized communities and must be acknowledged, the commission said.
“Eliminating racial profiling is essential to upholding the rule of law, promoting public confidence and providing safer communities,” chief commissioner Renu Mandhane said. “In 2019, Indigenous peoples and racialized communities expect and demand concrete actions.”
The policy, called Eliminating Racial Profiling in Law Enforcement, identifies seven main principles and practices aimed at affecting needed change when it comes to treating people as more likely to be criminals based on their skin colour.