Toronto Pride Parade takes place amid tensions between LGBTQ community, police
TORONTO — As Toronto’s annual Pride parade wound through the city’s core on Sunday, the streets might have been their usual sea of colour, but at moments, a heaviness hung in the air.
The subdued tone at the annual celebration put on by the city’s LGBTQ community surfaced twice — first, as marchers paused for a moment of silence at 3 p.m. and later, at the culmination of the parade, when participants clad in black T-shirts that read “we will not rest until we’re safe” took to the route.
The moments were Pride’s way of paying tribute to men with ties to the city’s gay village who were the alleged victims of 66-year-old Bruce McArthur. The self-employed landscaper was arrested and charged with eight-counts of first-degree murder earlier this year.
Members of the LGBTQ community have said the disappearances and deaths of the men were not seriously investigated by police, who parade organizers banned from marching in the event while in uniforms for the second year in a row.


