'White Student Alliance' prompts investigation at Edmonton high school - Action News
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Edmonton

'White Student Alliance' prompts investigation at Edmonton high school

An investigator with the EPS hate crimes unit is working with Edmonton public school officialsto investigate an online group that encourages local students to fight Black supremacy.

'It's blatantly racist. It's rooted in fear. It's rooted in hate'

A group called "Scona White Student Alliance" called on students at Strathcona High School to "rise up" and fight "racism against white people" in social media posts on the weekend. (Scott Neufeld/CBC)

Administrators at a southEdmonton highschool are consulting with the Edmonton Police Servicehate crimes unit as theyinvestigate an online group that encourages local students to fight "Black supremacy."

The "Scona White Student Alliance" calls on students at Strathcona High School to "rise up" andfight"racism against white people."

Accounts for the group were established on various social media platforms this week, prompting concern from students, parents and school officials.

Trisha Estabrooks, chair of the Edmonton Public School Board, described the postsas disappointing and disgusting.

"It's blatantly racist," Estabrooks said during a news conference Tuesday. "It's rooted in fear. It's rooted in hate. All of those things are concerning."

In a statement to CBC News, an Edmonton police spokesperson saidthe Hate Crime and Violent Extremism Unit is working closely with school administration.

An investigating officer is consulting with the school andwill continue to "support them as needed," the statement said.

Estabrooks said school officials do not know who is responsible for the accounts butthat does not diminish the harmful content of the messages.

"It's so clear that further anti-racism education is needednot just in our schools, but in our society as a whole," she said.

"All students in our division deserve and have a right to feel safeand welcomeand included in our school communities."

School promises 'zero tolerance'

Carrie Rosa, a spokesperson for Edmonton Public Schools, said in a statement that staff were made aware of the social media accounts on Sunday.

Police were informed immediately and parents can expect an update on the situation later Tuesday, Rosa said.

"There is zero tolerance for hate-filled accounts and posts like this,"the statement said."Our Black, Indigenous and People of Colour students have the right to feel safe and welcome in their school and community."

A Twitter account for the "Scona White Student Alliance" has been suspended, butas of Tuesday morningan Instagram account for the group remained active.

The page has a series of troubling posts about racism and discrimination.

A post published Sunday readsin part: "White lives matter! ... We have been forced to sit in our classes and listen to some clowns ranting how terrible and racist are all whites."

A second post published Sunday alludes to Martin Luther King Jr.'s"I Have a Dream" speechin whichhe spoke about beingjudged by the content of one'scharacter and not the colour of one's skin.

The post suggestsstudents are deemed racists simply by being white.

"Society is being dominated by victimhood and anti-white racism, we are slowly regressing back to the starting point where others are treated differently based on the [colour] of their skin" the post reads.

Anti-racism education

Estabrooks said she became aware of the posts of Sunday after receiving several complaints fromparents.

Shecalled the posts a "wake-up call."

Teachers are being encouraged to talk about the posts with their students and use the incident as opportunity to talk about discrimination, she said.

"I don't know if it matters how widespread it was," she said. "Even if it had a small spread, it doesn't take away the fact that this was done and that it has an impact.

"It just highlights how critical we need to, as a school division and society, reflect on what it truly means to be anti-racist."