Indigenous woman handcuffed during ‘peaceful’ protest at Queen’s Park
A demonstration aimed at calling attention to missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls led to one protester being placed in handcuffs in Toronto on Monday.
In an online video, protester Keitha Keeshig Tobias can be seen wearing a sign and standing in front of a statue of John A. Macdonald at Queen’s Park on Canada Day in an effort to bring attention to violence against Indigenous women.
On top of the statue is a red dress, a symbol meant to memorialize missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.
Vicky Sanderson was walking by Queen’s Park when she noticed the dress and stopped.
“I thought to myself, ‘This is a symbol I should probably pay attention to on Canada Day,’” she told Global News.
According to Sanderson, there was a man sitting on the statue holding the dress while Tobias was taping two small posters to the stone.
Suddenly, Sanderson says, a group of Queen’s Park security officials ran over.
“The whole thing was a bit excessive,” Sanderson said, alleging that the security guards started grabbing at Tobias before placing her in handcuffs.
“It was a peaceful protest,” she told Global News.
In another online video by Nanook Gordon Fareal, a witness can be heard yelling “shame” at members of Queen’s Park security while protesters ask why Tobias was handcuffed.
“Why don’t you take this monument down? This is a crime,” a woman can be heard saying, referring to the statue of Macdonald.
“Our people are just trying to make awareness about the atrocities our people are going through,” the protester yelled.
“She was just trying to put up a poster with tape,” Fareal calls out. “F— John A. Macdonald.”
According to witnesses, the security officials appeared to justify their actions as a tactic to get the male protester down from the statue.
“They kept saying they would take the cuffs off if I got the man to come down,” Tobias explained on Facebook.
In Fareal’s video, after a few minutes, security officials can be seen removing the handcuffs from Tobias.
“Leave our people alone, let them have their say,” a protester yells in the same video.
Global News has reached out to Queen’s Park security, which has not yet commented on the incident.
Toronto police said officers were not called to the scene.
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