Advertisement

Anti-gentrification rally held at old Vancouver police station; Pidgin protester pepper-sprayed

An anti-gentrification activist has his eyes washed out with milk after he was pepper-sprayed while protesting outside Pidgin restaurant in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside

.
An anti-gentrification activist has his eyes washed out with milk after he was pepper-sprayed while protesting outside Pidgin restaurant in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside . Photograph by: Joseph Jones, Submitted

Anti-gentrification protesters painted the outer wall of the old Vancouver police station at 312 Main St. Sunday, their plaintive prose vowing to continue their fight for more social housing in the Downtown Eastside.

Slogans like “make Vancouver inclusive, not exclusive” and “Oh please won’t you be my neighbour” adorned the wall of the “cop shop” after the event, organized by local activists including the hunger striker known as Homeless Dave.

Homeless Dave has just entered the fourth week of his hunger strike demanding 100 per cent social housing at the controversial Sequel 138 condo development slated for the former site of the Pantages Theatre.

He is also demanding the same for the former VPD headquarters, which is now slated to become a subsidized working space for high-tech companies and operated by the Vancouver Economic Commission.

Sunday’s “Paint Party for Housing” comes after an anti-gentrification protester was hit by pepper spray while picketing the Pidgin restaurant last Thursday evening.

Story continues below advertisement

The unnamed protester was hit by the mace around 6 p.m., according to VPD spokesman Const. Brian Montague.

Breaking news from Canada and around the world sent to your email, as it happens.

“The victim refused to provide his name or tell police what happened,” Montague said in an email. “The victim also refused to have police call for an ambulance to be treated for the exposure.

“Other protesters who are believed to have witnessed the incident said they would drive the victim to hospital.”

The man’s assailant whereabouts or identity is unknown.

Pidgin has been the target of community activists since opening its doors on Feb. 1 at 350 Abbott Street. Demonstrators have been picketing outside the restaurant to draw attention to what they say is gentrification and encroachment on the only remaining Vancouver community where low-income people feel accepted.

Jean Swanson of the poverty-advocacy group Carnegie Community Action Project said the business, and others like it, have no place in a neighbourhood where hundreds of residents are struggling, and in many cases failing, to keep a roof over their heads.

Rather, businesses like Sunrise Market, known as the cheapest grocery store in the city, are what the community needs, she said.

“Community members can get things that they need and afford, and they are treated with respect and not trailed by security guards, which happens a lot,” she said.

Story continues below advertisement

Efforts by some business owners, including those at Pidgin, to integrate into the community by shopping locally and contributing to food and social programs may be well-intentioned, but aren’t the solution, said Swanson.

“People here don’t want charity,” she said.

“If I were (the business owners), I would get it together and hold a news conference and call on (B.C. Housing Minister) Rich Coleman and (Prime Minister) Stephen Harper to build 5,000 units of self-contained social housing. I would ask they raise welfare rates. I would stop trying to make it seem that the situation in the Downtown Eastside can be solved by charity, and get on-board and start working for actual policy changes,” she said.

Sponsored content

AdChoices