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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN YK: Editorial: A Tale Of Two Communities
Title:CN YK: Editorial: A Tale Of Two Communities
Published On:2006-07-28
Source:Yukon News (CN YK)
Fetched On:2008-01-13 06:59:10
A TALE OF TWO COMMUNITIES

Canada is a big country, with a lot of diversity, but there are indeed
many cultural strings binding us together.

Who would have thought vigilante justice would be one of
them?

Last week in Whitehorse a group of 50 people, mostly young men, some
armed with clubs and blades, exercised their power by exorcising a
suspected drug dealer from a local bar.

Although they carried weapons, their actions were non-violent.

The group that assembled on Wednesday and Thursday "wasn't like a
violent mob," said one activist, who asked to remain nameless because
he fears for his safety.

"But there were people that were armed with knives, because these guys
are dangerous."

And, although the confrontation remained non-violent, it was
vigilantism nonetheless -- informal justice taking place outside the
law.

But what a weak brand of vigilantism the Yukon wields, compared to New
Brunswick.

Last weekend about 50 residents in Grand Manan, NB, attacked a known
drug house operating in the island hamlet of 2,700 people, and burned
it to the ground.

Hooligans on both sides of the conflict wielded guns, knives and
baseball bats as they fought for more than four hours, according to
the Globe and Mail.

The island's three RCMP officers were quickly overwhelmed. Volunteer
firefighters tried unsuccessfully to quash the flames, all the while
dodging rocks hurled by the vigilantes.

Gunfire was traded, but no one was hit. More than a dozen minor
injuries resulted, with no charges laid, while the cops try to figure
out who did what.

Now that's a mob.

"If there are charges we'll deal with it but really we want to help
the community heal," Grand Manan RCMP Sgt. Greg MacAvoy told the Globe
and Mail.

"It's a lesson in how things can go off the rails.

"You hope that in the clear light of day that people who were involved
have had time to have a sober second thought and say, 'Hey, maybe we
went a little overboard.'"

You think?

"It's pretty hard to condone violence of the level that escalated to
Saturday night," continued MacAvoy.

"You can understand that people get frustrated and to the end of their
rope.

"I'm betting a lot of the people involved in this were acting
completely out of character. But things don't have to get that extreme."

The question, for Whitehorse as well, is why did they feel they had to
take justice into their own hands?

Some, like Grand Manan's mayor Dennis Greene, blame the justice
system.

"The police are doing a fine job but we're being let down by the
justice system, which gives criminals more rights than victims,"
Greene told the Globe and Mail.

Others blame the police for not cracking down on known drug houses and
users.

But Whitehorse RCMP say their hands are tied.

"It's a problem because people don't want to get involved," Whitehorse
RCMP Sgt. Ross Milward said last week.

"They're intimidated, and if we don't have witnesses there's nothing
we can do."

The vigilante reaction in Whitehorse is already established.

It's just not Maritime-tough quite yet.

We hope it never is.
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