Defund the police painted on College Street in Toronto in huge pink letters
Just ahead of a march and sit-in planned for today, the words 'defund the police' have been pained in massive pink letters on College Street outside of the Toronto Police Services headquarters.
Images show people using rollers to paint the message in bright pink along the stretch of College Street between Yonge and Bay Streets.
It's a beautiful day to beautify the ugliest part of College street with dreams of liberation. #DefundThePolice #BlackLivesMatter #topoli #cdnpoli #onpoli pic.twitter.com/XEtnH4mMtN
— Black Lives Matter — Toronto (@BLM_TO) June 19, 2020
The message is part of the Abolish the Police Juneteeth Sit-In meant to double as a "celebration of freedom and liberation."
It is one of many ongoing protests taking place this weekend around Toronto that call for police reform and an end to anti-Black racism.
DEFUND THE POLICE has been painted outside Toronto Police Headquarters - 📹 @FareenKarim #Toronto #TorontoPolice #TorontoPoliceHeadquarters #DefundThePolice pic.twitter.com/K9dyE0LiKj
— blogTO (@blogTO) June 19, 2020
Today also marks Juneteeth, a holiday primary celebrated in the United States that marks the liberation of those still held as slaves near the end of the American Civil War.
Protesters have painted the words DEFUND THE POLICE on the street surrounded by the names of victims outside Toronto Police Headquarters - 📹 @FareenKarim #Toronto #TorontoPolice #TorontoPoliceHeadquarters #DefundThePolice pic.twitter.com/Eaxn3Dmjeq
— blogTO (@blogTO) June 19, 2020
Calls to defund the Toronto Police Services have been growing with several city councillors supporting a partial defunding of the police budget.
Today TPS and the mayor are getting up in front of the media to tell us that they are responding to our calls by doing more of the same.
— Black Lives Matter — Toronto (@BLM_TO) June 19, 2020
We say bun dat.
We demand better. We demand our lives.
Defund. Disarm. Dismantle.
Our Demands:https://t.co/Gifh3IeTpT#DefundThePolice
Toronto Police Services have made recommendations for confronting anti-Black racism, but many said it's not enough.
Similar messages have been painted on city streets, such as the one across from the White House in Washington D.C. where 'Black Lives Matter' was painted in yellow.
Covering the road leading away from the White House, are the words Black Lives Matter, written in yellow, followed by the flag of what would be the 51st state if Washington D.C. ever becomes one.
— David Begnaud (@DavidBegnaud) June 6, 2020
pic.twitter.com/N2fduMR2nV
The march was slated to start at noon on Friday, June 19, beginning at TPS headquarters and travelling south to city hall.
Join the conversation Load comments