Funeral held for man shot on Toronto streetcar
'Sammy never hurt anyone,' family friend says of 18-year-old Sammy Yatim
Family and friendssaid their final goodbyes at a funeral todayfor Sammy Yatim, who was shot and killed by police while the 18-year-old was armed with a knife aboard a streetcar.
His younger sister urged mourners to take action to ensure his death is the last of its kind.
"Please everybody, let's be strong. Stop with the tears and start with the action," Sarah Yatim told those who came to pay their respects to her brother.
"He wasn't the first to die this way, but hopefully he can be the last," she said in a tribute to the young man whose death has captured national attention.
Dozens of media memberswere waiting outside the property,and are not permitted to attendthe funeral in suburban Scarborough, near the family home.
Joseph Nazar, a friend of the family, spoke with media beforehand and said Yatim's mother, Sahar Bahadi, is so devastated she had a hard time standing yesterday.
"There's a lot of questions unanswered, obviously, but we know one thing," he said. "Sammy was taken away from us. Sammy never hurt anyone."
Amateurvideos viewed more than a million times show Yatim being shot at nine times in rapid successionjust after midnight ET on Saturday whilehe was alone on a stopped streetcar. Just before police arrived,Yatim reportedly stood up and brandished a knifeon the 505 streetcar on Dundas Street West near Trinity Bellwoods Park.
Sarah Yatim'ssister donned a T-shirt bearing his photo and the words "9 shots...?" and the situation was tense after the funeral with some in the crowdthreatening members of the media.
Many people have responded with anger at the Toronto police force and Const. James Forcillo, named as the officer who fired the shots,but Nazar said in a previous interview Wednesday thatthe familydoesn't support that anger.
Nazar, among the mourners and media at a funeral home visitation Wednesday night, said the justice system must be allowed to take its course.
"We're not a part of anybody who's scolding the police," he said. "We respect the police, we respect the force."
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Some whoattended the visitation,including Chandra Seecharran, didn't know Yatim.
"It's not right at all He's just a little boy lying in that casket," she said.
'There is full co-operation'
People at the visitation told CBC reporter Steven Bull that they still want to know why police shot Yatim, butthey'll need to wait until Ontario's police watchdog, the Special Investigations Unit, completes its investigation.
Ontario ombudsman AndrMarin told CBC News on Wednesday thatpolice rarely co-operate fully with the SIU a comment that didn't go over well with Toronto police Chief Bill Blair.
"All 22 witness officers have given their statements," he said. "This is full co-operation with the SIU investigation and unfortunately, Mr. Marin's uninformed comments aren't very helpful to the situation."
Blair did not attendYatim's funeral, but the family has thanked him for reaching out to them personally.