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Visually impaired man awarded $3,000 for discrimination after potential employer cancelled interview

by | Jul 30, 2012 | All, Attitudinal Barriers, Commentary, Human Rights Cases, Systemic Barriers | 0 comments

VANCOUVER — A Vancouver man has been awarded $3,000 after the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal found a potential employer discriminated against him after learning he was visually impaired.

Mallaz Khalil, a University of B.C. grad, had responded in April 2011 to a job ad for a recruiter/counsellor at Woori Education Group, which describes itself as an “international student agency.”

The agency was looking for people who spoke various languages, including Arabic, which Khalil speaks.

Khalil was initially interviewed over the phone for the job, then invited to Woori’s offices for an in-person interview.

Khalil asked Woori to email him its address, stating he was visually impaired. Woori later cancelled the interview.

Khalil graduated in November 2010 from UBC and plans to attend the university’s law school this fall.

He has been looking for work in the Vancouver area, without success.

The agency denied cancelling the in-person interview for any reason related to Khalil’s visual impairment.

The respondent said the person hired for the recruiting position was expected to participate in parties and events for students.

Tribunal member Robert B. Blasina found the reasons insufficient to explain why a visually impaired person should not be considered for the job.

He found discrimination based on a physical disability and awarded $3,000 in damages for injury to Khalil’s dignity and feelings.

Reproduced from the Vancouver Sun.

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