Responding
to repeated calls of Indigenous groups, other activists, and NGOs, Canada'sPrime Minister Justin
Trudeau
established
the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and
Girls in September 2016 to examine the disproportionate number of
missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls in Canada and
how such cases are handled. Now published, the report consists of
more than 1,200 pages and includes more than 230 recommendations.
It urges the federal, provincial and territorial governments to
develop an action plan to counter violence against Indigenous women
and girls. The thousands of Indigenous women and girls who were
murdered or disappeared across the country in recent decades are
victims of a "Canadian genocide," says the final report of
the national inquiry created to probe the ongoing tragedy. The report
states that "due to the gravity of this issue," the inquiry
is preparing a "supplementary report on the Canadian genocide of
Indigenous peoples according to the legal definition of genocide,"
which will be posted at a later date
Sen. Lillian
Dyck, Saskatchewan senator, explained, "In
this case we are actually looking at the murder of Indigenous women
and girls. So that to me is genocide," she said. "And
sometimes you need to name things really strongly before people wake
up and start to pay attention to it...in our laws, we protect dogs.
We protect taxi drivers. We protect police officers and prison
guards. Why can't we protect indigenous women and girls?"
The
Assembly of First Nations issued a statement saying National Chief
Perry Bellegarde "has said many times that the treatment of
First Nations in Canada is consistent with the definition of genocide
based on the many assaults on First Nations people and culture."
The
statement cited residential schools, the
Sixties Scoop, forced sterilization and the "massive
apprehensions" of Indigenous children by the child welfare
system as examples of this "assault."
"The
violence and homicide against Indigenous women and girls is part of
this pattern and governments need to work urgently with Indigenous
people to stop it," said the statement.
Shirley
Wilson's daughter, Wannitta Wolfe, also known as Eagle Flies over
Smudge, was shot and killed in Regina in 1999, explained, "People
have a view, I believe, that we are disposable. And we are not. We
matter — just like everybody else in society, right?
But for many years, that hasn't been the case," she said.
Carol
Wolfe of Saskatoon, whose
daughter, Karina, was murdered in 2010, said"I'm hoping that
it will bring change, change to make the people understand we
all matter," Wolfe said. "It makes me mad and angry that I
had to lose my daughter to bring change. It still breaks my heart
daily and I feel sad...” When
her daughter went missing, Wolfe said she was initially rebuffed by
the Saskatoon police service. And then she had a tough time getting
answers to her questions.
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