RCMP in western P.E.I. have charged four men in connection with an alleged assault and vandalism in Abram-Village early in September.
Police were called to the Évangéline Recreation Centre at about 1:30 a.m. on Sept. 3, as an event connected to the P.E.I. Acadian Festival was wrapping up. Two men were injured and were taken to hospital with non-life threatening injuries.
Some people who had volunteered at the festival also reported their vehicles had been vandalized in the parking lot.
Local groups said the victims were immigrants from Algeria who had settled in the area, and called the attack racially motivated.
One of the people who was injured in the attack worked for the Coopérative d’Intégration Francophone, the provincial agency that helps new French-speaking immigrants. The other was an employee at the French Daycare Association of P.E.I., which relies heavily on newcomers to fill positions within its system.
The P.E.I. advocacy group BIPOC USHR (which stands for Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour United for Strength, Home, Relationship) said the attack amounted to a case of Islamophobia.
Within days, police had made four arrests, but more than two months later, this is the first news of charges against the men.
They are:
- Darren Richard, 29, of Egmont Bay, has been charged with assault and uttering threats;
- Samuel Bernard, 25, of Urbainville, has been charged with assault;
- Troy Gallant, 28, of Abram-Village, has been charged with assault;
- Tyson Arsenault, 23, of Wellington, has been charged with mischief, a Criminal Code offence associated with the damage of property.
“The P.E.I. RCMP recognize that incidents like this have a profound effect beyond the individuals directly involved,” RCMP Const. Gavin Moore said in a news release issued Friday morning.
“We continue to work with the BIPOC community, and all Islanders, towards the common goal of building safer communities.”
Witnesses still sought
RCMP are still looking for witnesses to the incident.
At a community meeting held Sept. 7, the vice-president of the French daycare association, Patrick Buswell, said he hoped witnesses would come forward.
“Maybe they’re scared of maybe sharing information, knowing that those assailants may get back to them,” he said.
“I’m hoping that those witnesses decide to stand up to intimidation, to bullying, to violence… It’s so important for the healing process, but also to identify the people who were part of those appalling actions.”
Daycare worker moved away
The daycare worker who was injured in the attack moved out of the Évangéline region with his family shortly afterward because he no longer felt safe, officials with the daycare association said.
Isabelle Dasylva-Gill, the executive director of SAFÎLE (Société acadienne et francophone de l’Î.-P.-É.), the main voice for the Acadian and francophone community of P.E.I., said at the time that the move was not surprising.
“You have to understand that, you know, people are coming here for safety… The first reflex is to kind of get away from the danger zone,” she said.