'The place is safe': Edmonton shisha lounge wins fight to stay open
Andrea Huncar | CBC | Posted: February 20, 2019 5:24 AM | Last Updated: February 20, 2019
City appeal committee reverses decision to shut down Nyala Lounge
After years locked in a battle with a hospitality policing unit, the owner of an Edmonton shisha bar has won his fight to stay open.
On Tuesday, an appeal committee overturned a decision by the city's licensing department to shut down Nyala Lounge, located northeast of downtown.
"I think the city went one step forward, we appreciate that, as the African-Canadian community, we thank the city councillors," said owner Mulugeta Tesfay.
"The people spoke, the community spoke, the place is safe."
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The committee — made up of councillors Moe Banga, Jon Dziadyk and Tony Caterina — upheld additional conditions imposed on Nyala last summer and said a written decision would follow. Members decided the bar's inability to operate over the past week-and-a-half, during a postponement of the hearing, would serve as sufficient penalty for breaching conditions.
Lawyer Simon Renouf represented the Public Safety Compliance Team (PSCT), a multi-agency unit that includes Edmonton police, the city, the fire department and Alberta Liquor, Gaming and Cannabis. Team members Sgt. Colin Simpson and Justin Lallemand also spoke to the committee.
In a submission last year pushing for Nyala's closure, the PSCT accused Nyala of breaching dozens of conditions and jeopardizing public safety.
Its arguments were the basis for the city's Dec. 6 decision to cancel Tesfay's business licence, which was previously cancelled in September, then overturned a day later, because the city didn't properly notify Tesfay.
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Earlier Tuesday, Tesfay again insisted Nyala is "one of the safest places in Edmonton."
He told the committee he was there to defend his rights as an African-Canadian to run a business in Edmonton.
"It is also to fight the racism we've been through by the police department and the city," said Tesfay, emphasizing that his concerns only involved a few officers.
"They're harassing my customers, they're harassing my workers for the last three years."
The PSCT denies all allegations of racial profiling and harassment.
The end goal of the compliance team was to close down Mr. Tesfay's business. - Tom Engel
In his submissions, Nyala's defence lawyer Tom Engel told the committee Tesfay, 46, a decorated war veteran, invested his life savings in Nyala Lounge after a suicide bomb blast in Afghanistan ended 20 years of service in the Canadian military.
Engel accused the inspection team of providing "self-serving summaries" without full disclosure of the evidence against Nyala, as well as a number of misrepresentations.
The team cited violent incidents Tesfay himself reported, or ones that had "nothing to do with Nyala" and continued to reference charges that had been stayed, said Engel.
Engel referenced a spreadsheet that shows of 43 tickets issued to Tesfay — worth more than $80,000 — 33 have been withdrawn, dismissed or cancelled.
Tesfay has been found guilty on six infractions for violations such as overcrowding, and about nine tickets are still active.
"The end goal of the compliance team was to close down Mr. Tesfay's business and everything that they did furthered that goal," Engel said.
Additional police scrutiny could be explained by a "flip flop" on the part of Nyala, said Renouf.
Last June, Tesfay agreed to an additional nine conditions to stay open, only two days after saying he couldn't comply, Renouf said.
"That was obviously a situation that the public safety compliance team had to look into," said Renouf. "They had a duty and it's unfortunate that there's a perception of ethnic or racial targeting here."
They had a duty and it's unfortunate that there's a perception of ethnic or racial targeting here. - Simon Renouf
Renouf said Nyala repeatedly failed to meet conditions such as keeping the ventilation on, keeping an accurate count of patrons and meeting security requirements.
"There was not one inspection when every condition was being complied with," he said.
"What we've got is a problem of ungovernability. The bargain was made, and the bargain was not lived up to by Nyala."
Renouf highlighted a January 2018 incident as a principal reason to close Nyala. Police charged Tesfay with obstruction of a peace officer in an incident at the lounge involving a gun that goes to court in April.
Tesfay has pleaded not guilty, but didn't comment on allegations, as advised by his lawyer.
Earlier in the day, customers, staff and neighbours vouched for Nyala's safety as a community-oriented business and questioned the need for frequent inspections involving large groups of officers.
"Nyala is home," said regular customer Hawa Badi, who described the bar as a peaceful place to go listen to good music and smoke shisha. "At Nyala we all become family."
Linda Landers, who works at the nearby Humpty's restaurant, blamed issues on another nearby hookah bar that has since closed.
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Customer Rashid Hersy recalled up to 16 officers visiting Nyala, including the gang unit. He questioned why bars near the downtown or Whyte Avenue, where "people are being killed inside," reopen soon after.
"Why are African businesses a target?" asked Hersy.
Renouf said he was not aware of any other African Canadian bar subject to PSCT investigations, apart from Papryrus Lounge, which lost its license in 2015 after two men were shot dead.
"My client completely rejects there is racial profiling or targeting," said Renouf.
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Applause broke out after the committee's decision before supporters gathered outside where Engel told them "you made the difference," prompting another round of applause.
Engel said he plans to discuss the "differential treatment" of African Canadian businesses with Edmonton Police Chief Dale McFee. He is asking McFee to investigate why "nothing has happened" a year-and-a-half after Tesfay's filed his complaints under the Police Act.
Tesfay is still deciding whether to reopen but said, either way, the ruling is a victory for the rights of local African Canadian business owners being harassed by inspectors.
"We're willing to work with them if they're willing to work with us," he said.