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University of Ottawa student leaders say they don't want the school to focus solely on
campus security as it works to address racism.
A group of four students emerged Thursday evening from an hour-long meeting with
Jacques Frémont, the university president, saying the meeting had been positive.
Jamal Koulmiye-Boyce, who was carded and handcuffed June, said the discussions are
the beginning of a broader cultural change that will take a long time.
"All we've begun is the dialogue to move in the right directions," he said. "My safety on
campus will always be questioned and I don't expect that to be changed within the next
few years."
He said he wants a system in place so an individual acting in a discriminatory way
would be caught before someone ends up handcuffed on the street in the same way he
was.
Remove onus from students Koulmiye-Boyce said the issue is bigger
than just students' relationship to protective services and he would like to see the
university collect race-based data. "Even just the idea of speaking out means you have




Question (summer of main points?what are the main points or argument the author make in article in other words what the message behind this article

Respuesta :

Answer:

The author is saying, “Anyone can take a stand against racism, wether it be something big or just saying something to discourage it. It may take a long time but something needs to be done to fix the issue of racism.”

Explanation: It is good that students are taking a stand but it will take a while for this issue to be resolved but it doesn’t mean they shouldn’t try.

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