Pride flag torn down in 'cowardly' act, says Ottawa woman - Action News
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Ottawa

Pride flag torn down in 'cowardly' act, says Ottawa woman

OneOttawa neighbourhood plans to hang more than a dozen Pride flags in a show of solidarity after one was torn down from a house Friday night.

Neighbours have vowed to hoist their own flags in solidarity, says Jane Harley

Jane Harley holds the Pride flag that was torn down from her Poplar Street home on Friday night. She says more than a dozen people in the neighbourhood now plan to put up their own rainbow flags after she told them what happened. (Rachelle Elsiufi / CBC)

More than a dozen residents in one Ottawa neighbourhood plan to hang Pride flags in a show of solidarity after one was torn down from a house Friday night.

Surveillance videoshows two men standing in front of Jane Harley's home, one appearing to take a photo asthe other walks up to her porch and rips down her rainbow flag.

The video, which Harley shared withCBC, then shows the two men running away.

"It's cowardly, and it's just a show of hate and disrespect for other people," Harley told CBC Saturday outside her home on Poplar Street, near Little Italy.

She has spoken to a community police officer about what happened, but said she hasn't yet decided to file a report.

Harley saidthat when she told her neighbours the news, 13 of them decided they would also hang uprainbow flags. She said she placed an order for 13 flags on Saturday,and they arrived Sunday.

She told CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning on Monday that most of them are already flying on Poplar Street, and that neighbours on nearby streets plan to put up even more of them.

An image taken from surveillance footage outside Jane Harleys home on June 17, 2022, shows two people running away after tearing down her Pride flag. (Submitted by Jane Harley)

'An act of hatred'

"It's certainly an act of hatred that we don't like to see in our city," said Somerset Coun. Catherine McKenneyafter watching the video.

"Somebody ripping down a flag and running it's not funny."

McKenney, who identifies asnon-binary and uses they/them pronouns,said the arrival of the Freedom Convoy earlier this year may have left some people feelingmore comfortable committingthose kinds of acts.

Hateful messaging was spotted among crowds, including swastikas and other anti-Semitic imagery, and at least one Confederate flag.The Ottawa Police Servicelaunched a hate crime hotline to investigate crimes related to the demonstrations.

"We all watched in horror in February [when] symbols of hatred came into our city. We'd never seen that before," McKenney said.

"And I think that those people have been emboldened. And I think that's what you're seeing now, is that they feel that it's OK."

While hateful acts don't happen in Ottawa on a regular basis, McKenney saidit would certainly be "frightening" if one were to take place at one's own home.

Somerset Coun. Catherine McKenney, seen here in April, called the incident an 'act of hatred.' (Francis Ferland/CBC)

Occurred during Pride Month

Friday night's incident comes asmany people across Canada are recognizingPride Month a time for celebrating the diversity of the LGBTQcommunity, while acknowledging its history, the hardships peoplehave endured and the progress that'sbeen made.

McKenney said the latest act of hate is another exampleof the importance of marking the month,andthat "the fight is not over."

"There's a lot of transphobia, homophobia in the world," they said. "So to have Pride, to have people come out and celebrate, really puts out that message that the vast majority of people are, you know, accepting and loving."

For Harley, a heterosexual woman who describes herself as an ally of the LGBTQcommunity, she said she'll continue to hang the rainbow flag to senda clear message.

"[It's] to let your friends and neighbours know that you support them and love them."