Hate crimes reported to Ottawa police rise in 2022 - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 02:08 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Hate crimes reported to Ottawa police rise in 2022

Ottawa police say they received an average of more than one reported hate crime per day in 2022. Fifty-one people were charged as a result of the reports.

377 reports in 2022 compares to about 95 in 2017, 180 in 2020

Ottawa police headquarters on Elgin Street.
Ottawa police headquarters on Elgin Street in April 2021. The force said 174 criminal charges were laid in 2022 against 51 people following 377 hate incident reports. (Olivier Plante/CBC)

Ottawa police say investigators received reports of, on average, more than one hate crime perday in 2022, which led to another rise in theannual total.

A news release Thursday said the force's hate and bias crime unit looked at 377 incidents last year that resulted in 174 criminal charges laid against 51people.

That was an increase from 26 people facing 92 charges in 2021.

The groupsmost victimized were identical in 2021 and2022 (using Statistics Canada terms): Jewish, Black, Muslim, LGBTQ, Arab, West Asian,East Asian and South Asian people.

The most serious violations of 2022, according to Ottawa police, were assault, assault with a weapon, mischief to property and threats.

Police still say hate crimes remain "extremely underreported." Last year an officer with the unittold CBCpolice estimate they only learn about35 to 40 per cent of hate-motivated incidents that occur.

A woman sits at her desk looking at a computer.
Amira Elghawaby, director of communications of the Canadian Race Relations Foundation, at her home office in Barrhaven. She says many people are uncomfortable coming forward and reporting hate crimes. (Stu Mills/CBC)

"These numbers, while they represent an increase, they don't tell the full story," saidAmira Elghawaby, spokesperson for the Canadian Race Relations Foundation. She explained how many people are uncomfortable coming forward and reporting hate crimes to police.

Elghawaby says various communities have shared in the past year that they're worried about the rise in hate.

"Numbers that we're seeing today will give us a hint that things are not getting better," she said.

Annual rise since2017

After some confusion noted in CBC Ottawa coverage in 2019, Ottawa police "reintroduced" a hate crime section early in 2020.

In that news release it also mentioned changes in 2017 to report hate incidents online tomake the reporting process easier.

The number of reported hate crimes to Ottawa police, according to various news releases, has been:

Numbers from previous years can increase slightly if more charges are laid after theyear ends.

Nationally, Statistics Canada says the number ofpolice-reported hate crimes generally rose from 2014 to 2020, its most recent year of data.

With files from Stu Mills