Sikh-Hindu Temples Seek Immediate Green Light For Surrey Police In Letter To BC’s Solicitor General

0
865

SURREY – The executives of Surrey’s six largest Sikh Gurdwaras and largest Hindu Mandir issued a call to the Honourable Mike Farnworth, who as Solicitor General is currently reviewing the City of Surrey’s roadmap to introducing a new local police force.

All seven institutions, whose congregations collectively represent a significant percentage of the city’s 168,000 South Asian residents, have signed onto and publicly released correspondence to the Minister requesting immediate action in allowing the plan to proceed.

The South Asian community has been particularly impacted by the growing violence across Surrey’s residential neighbourhoods, and is anxious for a change in the maintenance of public safety, according to Moninder Singh, President of Gurdwara Sahib Dasmesh Darbar.

“We are tired of waiting for real change in Surrey’s policing, which is why all of our executives have signed this letter to Mr. Farnworth,” said Singh. “The BC government must listen to the people who voted in favour of Mayor Doug McCallum’s proposal last October.”

In 2012, the BC government signed a 20-year renewal agreement with the R.C.M.P., which is a decision that was made without the input of residents in municipalities that currently rely on Canada’s national force to preserve public safety.

The palpable anger that this deal caused was reflected in the overwhelming support for the Safe Surrey Coalition, which ran on a three-pillar policy platform that pledged an end to the R.C.M.P.’s presence in the City of Surrey.

The unity that all temples are expressing in this call to the Solicitor General cannot be underestimated, contends Satish Kumar, President of the Laxmi Narayan Temple.

“I have never seen such collective support for any policy at the municipal level like I have with this transition plan to a local police force,” says Kumar. “The people have spoken loud and clear, and the only thing that is standing in the way of progress at the moment is the BC government’s review.”

The City of Surrey’s transition plan was presented to the Government of BC last month, with Minister Farnworth giving no indication of a time frame for approval other than stating he “won’t make a snap decision.”