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Edmonton

Edmonton coalition tries to calm refugee fears after weekend attacks

Habiba Abdulle's phone rang off the hook Monday with calls from refugee mothers afraid to send their children to school in Edmonton. Their concerns were sparked by news early Sunday that police had arrested a Somali refugee following two weekend attacks that police Chief Rod Knecht said were being investigated as possible "acts of terrorism."

'They were asking, is it safe for us to go? Because they were afraid of the backlash'

Refugees fear backlash

7 years ago
Duration 0:33
Habiba Abdulle, with the Alberta Somali Community Centre, tries to allay fears of backlash after Edmonton attacks.

Habiba Abdulle's phone rang off the hook Monday with calls fromrefugee mothers afraid to send their children to school in Edmonton.

"The questiontheywereasking, 'Is it safe for us to go?' "saidAbdulle, an advocate with the Alberta Somali Community Centre."Because they were afraid of the backlash."
Abdulahi Hasan Sharif faces five charges of attempted murder. (Edmonton Police Service)

Their concerns were sparked by news early Sunday that police had arrested Abdulahi Hasan Sharif, following two weekend attacks that police Chief Rod Knecht said were being investigated as possible "acts of terrorism."

Sharif, a Somali refugee who came to Canada in 2012, is accused of ramming a car into a police officer on Saturday night, then stabbing him with a knife. Police said later, during a high-speed chase that ended downtown, Sharif struck and injured four pedestrians with a rented cube van.

On Monday, police charged Sharif, 30, with five counts of attempted murder and several other offences, none of them terror-related.

As policeannounced the charges,Abdulleand more than a dozen others were meetingto discuss the impact of the news on vulnerable communities in Edmonton. They're part of asafety committeethat looks for grassroots solutions to crime, poverty, and racism.

Around the table sat representatives from the city's Indigenous community, the Ogaden Somali Community of Alberta Residents, police and the city, the Edmonton Mennonite Centre for Newcomers, and Edmonton Centre MP Randy Boissonnault.

Reassurance, support at school

The group decided to contact school boards to ask about measuresin place to support parents and determine what more could be done to reassure them.

"In my mind, that was hugely important that we talk to the moms," said Jan Fox, executive director of Reach Edmonton, an organization that aims to make Edmonton a safer place.

"Can you imagine? I'm a mom, too. And I can understand their fear."

Abdulle said her organization is instructing clients on ways to deal with hate incidents.Already, she said, some were expressing fears ofbacklash due to attacks overseas in Paris and Barcelona.

"What makes it more scary is, it's too close to home," she said. "It happened in Edmonton. Ithappened in their neighbourhood."

Most importantly, said Abdulle, they've been reassuring newcomer parents that Edmonton is a safe place, encouraging them to stay calm and go about their business.

"Because we don't want the terrorists to win," she said.
andrea.huncar@cbc.ca @andreahuncar