Tanzania's government has accused a Canadian diplomat of humiliating the entire nation by spitting at a policeman and a journalist, a Tanzanian newspaper says.
The diplomat, believed to be a top official of Canada's foreign-aid agency in Tanzania, was arrested for allegedly spitting at a senior police officer during an argument in a traffic jam, and later spat at a journalist who tried to photograph him at the police station, according to the Daily News, a Tanzanian newspaper.
Dana Cryderman, a spokesperson for the Foreign Affairs Department, would not confirm details of the case, saying only that the department is checking into it.
“The Department of Foreign Affairs is aware of the reported incident,” she said in a statement yesterday.
“While we continue to gather all the relevant information, we underscore the fact that Canadian employees posted abroad are held to a high standard of professional conduct in all their relations with officials in their host country.”
The diplomat was released on bail after being charged with obstructing police, the Daily News said, adding that his case has been forwarded to Tanzania's director of criminal investigations and could result in further charges.
The newspaper said he had claimed diplomatic immunity and refused to be interrogated by police, but later agreed to be questioned in the presence of the Canadian high commissioner.
In a statement quoted in the Daily News, Tanzania's Foreign Affairs Ministry said the incident had “humiliated the nation and its people” and could result in “measures” being taken against the Canadian “in accordance with diplomatic procedures.”
The newspaper said the diplomat was driving a Toyota Land Cruiser, belonging to the embassy, on the outskirts of the capital, Dar es Salaam, when the incident occurred on Wednesday. It said he rolled down the window of his car and spat in the face of a police officer named Corporal Samson who was directing traffic at an intersection.
Later, at the central police station, the same diplomat spat at a Tanzanian state television journalist named Jerry Muro who was trying to film him, it said.
True or not, the incident is likely to damage Canada's image in Tanzania. Commenting on the case on the Daily News website, one Tanzanian said the incident “brings bad memories” of “white men spitting on black men” in the colonial era.
The diplomat was freed because he had diplomatic immunity.















