Skip to main content

London, Ont. Muslim leader dismayed after elderly father targeted in violent parking lot incident

Share
London, Ont. -

What was supposed to be a carefree shopping day turned into anything but for Dr. Rubina Tahir and her family.

“The man proceeded to yell, ‘Go back to your country’ with obscenities,” she explained. She was recounting an experience she had Sunday when she and her husband took her elderly father to the south London Costco.

“You know, made the situation completely worse, completely heart-breaking.”

Rubina tells CTV News London that while waiting for a parking spot in the busy Costco lot, another driver became “enraged.” She says he got out of his own car and approached theirs. That’s when verbal attacks, including racial slurs, escalated to a physical attack.

“He was banging on the car window. He reached and pulled the wiper blade, continuously screaming, enraged. We were shocked. He then opened the passenger side door, grabbed my dad’s mask, and then he grabbed my dad and he wanted to fight.”

Dr. Rubina Tahir discusses a weekend attack in her elderly father in London, Ont. on Monday, Nov. 29, 2021.

The incident came to light after Rubina’s brother, Nawaz Tahir, a well-known leader in the London Muslim community, took to social media to say his 75-year-old father had been assaulted.

That was followed by a flurry of replies on Twitter, including from Maggie, who tweeted she’s “completely unsurprised” and “this city is racist.”

Political Science professor Paul Nesbitt-Larking tweeted “I’m appalled.”

While London city councillor Stephen Turner said, “your story helps to highlight the unspeakable events that occur too often.”

“My father is elderly, he walks with a limp, so he’s not a threat to anybody,” said Nawaz. He says at first London police told them they would not pursue charges against the alleged assailant because his father raised his hands after he had been attacked.

“You’re in the heat of the moment, someone has already assaulted you, and is continuing to verbally speak to you in an aggressive tone. So what are you supposed to do in those circumstances when you just want to get in to the store?”

Nawaz Tahir discusses an attack in his father in the Costco parking lot in south London, Ont., on Monday, Nov. 29, 2021. (Bryan Bicknell / CTV News)

Police later said they were continuing to look into the incident, and issued this statement Monday:

“This investigation is active and ongoing. We take incidents such as these seriously, and can confirm that officers continue to look into this matter.”

The parking lot incident took place amid ongoing efforts to fight back against Islamophobia.

London NDP MPPs are calling for measures to hold perpetrators to account. The proposed Our London Family Act follows the deadly attack on the Afzaal family this past June, in which three adults and a teen died after being struck by a pickup truck in what police said was a terror attack. A nine-year-old boy survived the attack with serious injuries.

London North Centre NDP MPP Terence Kernaghan says Islamophobic and other racist acts have been steadily on the rise.

“I think we also need to come to terms with the fact that many of these acts go unreported, and quite frankly I think that’s unacceptable. People need to feel safe, they need to also be ready and feel as though they’re heard when they report incidents such as these.”

Among other measures, the proposed bill would see the creation of an accountability office which would provide assistance to victims of hate crimes.

Nawaz added that the “justice system is really not assisting victims of hate crimes by taking the proper steps to believe it or prosecute it.”

Meantime, if there’s any consolation in the upsetting weekend incident, Rubina says it’s that a number of people in the Costco parking lot, along with Costco staff, came to their aid while the family was under attack.

“We’re thankful for the people that were in the parking lot, and specifically one person said, ‘They’re allowed to be here. This is a family outing.’”

CTVNews.ca Top Stories

Hertz CEO out following electric car 'horror show'

The company, which announced in January it was selling 20,000 of the electric vehicles in its fleet, or about a third of the EVs it owned, is now replacing the CEO who helped build up that fleet, giving it the company’s fifth boss in just four years.

Stay Connected