N.S. RCMP delay on street checks apology ‘damaging’ race relations: Black leaders
HALIFAX — The RCMP are further delaying a decision on whether to offer an apology to Halifax’s Black community for their use of street checks, as some Black Nova Scotian leaders say the force’s silence is damaging trust.
Rev. Lennett Anderson, the past moderator of the African United Baptist Association, disagrees with the Mounties’ view that they must await the completion of a national review of the practice.
Street checks, which are now banned in Nova Scotia, are defined as police randomly stop citizens, recording information and storing it electronically.
“It (the delay) wasn’t acceptable last year, nor is it acceptable now …. The silence is deafening,” Anderson said in an interview.