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Montreal

Calls for change at vigil held for Black man killed by Repentigny police

On Wednesday evening, he was among dozens who attended a vigil for the late Jean Ren Junior Olivier who was killed by police in Repentigny, just east of Montreal.

Black residents say they do not feel safe, prefer not to call police for help

Dozens gathered in Repentigny on Wednesday to honour Jean Ren Junior Olivier, who was killed by local police over the weekend. ( Sharon Yonan-Renold/CBC)

Jonathan Franois lives in Montreal's Rivire-des-Prairies neighbourhood and if a neighbour's party is too loud or kids are shooting fireworks in the streets, he doesn't call the police.

He sayshe's scared what will happen when police arrive.

In Rivire-des-Prairies, he sayshe's not the only one who feels that way. People intervene themselves, policing their own neighbourhood, rather than call in law enforcement, he said.

On Wednesday evening, he was among dozens who attended a vigil for the late Jean Ren Junior Olivier who was killed by police in Repentigny, just east of Montreal.

Marie-Mireille Bence, Olivier's mother, called police Sunday morning asking them to bring her son to hospital because he was having a mental health issue.

Instead of helping him, Bence said, six police officers arrived at her doorstep and shot him in the stomach. When police arrived, he had been holding a dinner knife, but the family said he had dropped it.

"If he was a white a person, he would not have died," Franoissaid.

Members of the Black community say they do not feel safe calling police for help in places like Montreal and Repentigny. (Sharon Yonan-Renold/CBC)

Pierre-Richard Thomas, who heads Lakay Media, has been fighting for years to end racial discrimination in Repentigny.

Thenon-profit group organized Wednesday's vigil, inviting "the entire population of Repentigny, whites or Blacks, to send a message to the city: that's enough," said Thomas.

Andrs Fontecilla, a QubecSolidaire MNA for the Laurier-Dorion riding, saysthere has to be an investigation into the shooting.

He saysthe friends and family of Olivier want answers and "I believe it is up to the government to answer these questions."

Dolmine Laguerre, Olivier's cousin, saysthe family is devastated, sad and mad.

"Are we safe in Repentigny? Are Black people welcome in Repentigny? We don't feel welcome. We feel we are a target," she said.

"We feel it is unfair for us to die just because our skin colour is different. We don't feel safe here."


For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of.You can read more stories here.

(CBC)

with files from Radio-Canada and CBC's Sharon Yonan-Renold