Community groups essential to fighting Montreal gun violence, police chiefs say - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 08:51 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Community groups essential to fighting Montreal gun violence, police chiefs say

Police chiefs in the Montreal area are calling on the government to provide community groups with consistent funding. They say the groups are essential to fighting against gun violence.

Montreal police services rely on groups to 'get message across' to youth

A group of people are holding anti-gun violence posters.
In November 2021, community workers such as Abdellah Azzouz, from the Forum jeunesse de Saint-Michel, took part in a march to denounce the fact that acts of violence had caused the death of three teenagers the year. (Samir Bendjafer/Radio-Canada)

Community groups are essential to fighting gun violence and the government needs to provide them with consistent and sustainablefunding, according to police chiefs in the Montreal area.

"Community groups have been around for 20, 30, 40 years and they have 'their finger on the pulse of the field' more than we do," said Fady Dagherin an interview with Radio-CanadaWednesday. Dagher was accompanied by Sophie Roy, interim Montreal police (SPVM) director and Pierre Brochet, who heads the Laval police service (SPL).

Their comments come at a time whenshootings in the Montreal area have occurred regularly andhave caused concern among residents. In response, Quebec is spending $250 million additional funding over five years, mainly to hire 450 Montreal police officers.

Police have a lot to do and "short-term repression is necessary", Dagher said, but police work alone can't overcome crime.

"God knows that community groups, street workers, those people are in the midst of it," he said.

Brochet saidthe issue lies with community groups having to seek funding every year.

He also saidthe pandemic, whichled to public health restrictions and people staying at home more, has weakened the social safety net, particularly for young people.

Tackling youth crime presents a different type of challenge, Dagher said.

"We're dealing with disorganized crime," hesaid. "Getting the message across to some 16-17-year-old in their basement, that's another story," he said.

Montreal police responded to a call in Montral-Nord, after a 22-year-old man was shot on Thursday. (Yannick Gadbois/Radio-Canada)

'A sense of impunity'

A typical series of events usually precedes gun violence, according to Roy.

"Something may have happened in a schoolyard, something else could have happened on social networks, so police services have to work on all these levels, and we need our partners in schools and the community," said the interim Montreal police chief.

Roy saidsome young people have a "sense of impunity."

"There is a trivialization, an unawareness [on the part of certain young people] about what could happen to them. A lack of awareness of human life," she said. "Everyone will need to work together."

Four police officers look to Montreal police interim director Sophie Roy.
In May 2022, Sophie Roy became the first woman to head the Montreal police force. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

The police chiefs say they don't believe the gun violence situation is overwhelming their teams.

Brochetsaidthere's beena 52 per cent decrease in the number of shots fired in the field,compared to the same period in 2021, which he calls a "great success."

Brochet also welcomes the Quebec's Operation Centaur, an $90-million provincewide initiative to crack down on gun-related crime.

"We work as a team in a really structured way," he said.

Police officers are also present in schools and at recreational sporting events, Brochet said.

"What we want is for a young person to not choose older, criminal and more violent role models and follow in their footsteps," he said.

Based on a report by Radio-Canada's Anne Marie Lecomte