Young Black men shaken after Ottawa police called on meeting - Action News
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Ottawa

Young Black men shaken after Ottawa police called on meeting

Chris Simba says officers with guns drawn surrounded his group on Sunday at the St. Laurent Shopping Centre.

People waiting to shoot a music video were handcuffed at gunpoint

Chris Simba says he still replays the Dec. 27 incident and worries over what could have happened. (Natalia Goodwin/CBC)

A young Black man in Ottawa saysa recent encounter with police has left himtraumatized.

Chris Simba, a 19-year-old musicproducer andmanager, said heplanned to shoot a video for one of his artists Sunday.

A group of seven youngBlack menwere waiting for the videographer outside the St. Laurent Shopping Centre when Simba saidthey were surroundedout of nowhere by about a dozen police cars and officers with weapons drawn.

"Our lives flashed before our eyes," he said.

Simbasaid he tried to explain to police there must have been a misunderstanding,butan officer pointed his gun at him. He said he was thenhandcuffed and put in a police cruiser.

"All of the boys that were in the car had to lay on the ground andhad at least 10 guns pointed at them. So it's like one wrong move [was] life or death," he said.

"We're good kids. We're kids with futures. Some of us have scholarships, some of us have passions."

WATCH | How Chris Simba is feeling after the incident:

Were kids with futures: Black youth shaken after Ottawa police called to music video shoot

4 years ago
Duration 1:09
Chris Simba, whose production company was working on a music video outside St. Laurent Shopping Centre on Sunday, says he was shocked when several police cruisers arrived and officers arrested several members of the group.

Released without charges

The Ottawa Police Service confirmed they responded to 911 calls of people wearing masks and holding a gun.

Police said they seized a replica handgun. Simba said that replica was a prop for the video that was never taken out of the car.

Four peoplewere arrested andreleased at the scene without charges, police said.

"I was glad that nobody ended up dead. It traumatizes the community for sure," said Robin Browne, co-lead of anti-racism group 613-819 Black Hub.

"This one is particularly egregious with the policedrawing their guns on these young boys. It's traumatizing when you get harassed by the police in any manner, but when they pull their guns, that's particularly traumatizing.It can have effects that last for years."

Anti-racism advocate Robin Browne says situations like this are dangerous and would like to see race-based data collected on incidents where officers draw a gun. (Robyn Miller/CBC)

Simba saidthe moment has replayed often in his mind.

He hopes the Ottawa police review how they could de-escalate situations differentlyand hopes officersunderstand there is a real fear of police for many people.

"There [are]so many ways that this situation could have been dealt with carefully when you approach these scenes, understand that you're dealing with people," he said.

"I literallyfelt like we were like terrorists or something It doesn't make you feel good about yourself, doesn't make you feel good about your skin."

Browne would like to seeOttawa policekeep raced-based data about when guns are drawn andon the use of force.


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.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)

Corrections

  • A previous version of the story said this group was going to shoot a music video outside the St. Laurent Shopping Centre. The group was meeting outside the mall to shoot the music video elsewhere.
    Dec 31, 2020 6:14 AM ET

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