Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. premier promises action after release of missing women inquiry report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2019 09:20 PM

    British Columbia Premier John Horgan says survivors and their families showed courage and leadership in sharing experiences that form the final report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.

    A statement issued by the premier's office says the final report highlights the "gendered impacts of colonial violence" that have been so severe the inquiry defined them as a "Canadian genocide."

    Horgan says the B.C. government is committed to learning from the stories, taking action and enacting change, adding that the report and its recommendations will be reviewed in detail.

    They will also be considered in context with the New Democrat government's work to implement the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the findings of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

    According to B.C.'s submission to the inquiry in December, more than 100 Indigenous women and girls had been murdered or gone missing in the province.

    Horgan says identifying issues linked to the much higher violence rate against Indigenous women is key, and is vital to the government's work toward true reconciliation.

    "We are committed to developing a path forward to end violence against Indigenous women and girls that will be directly informed by survivors, family members and communities," Horgan says in the statement.

    "Community-based engagement to collaborate on taking concrete steps together will soon begin and will continue through the summer and early fall."

    In its submission to the inquiry, the provincial government also says 580 Indigenous children died between 1867 and 1984 in the 22 residential schools in B.C., and thousands more youngsters were taken from their homes and raised in non-Indigenous households during the '60s Scoop.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Chief Of Defence Staff, DND Deputy Minister Brief Federal Cabinet

    OTTAWA — Canada's top general and the deputy minister of national defence are attending the federal cabinet this morning a week after the criminal case against the military's former second-in-command fell apart.

    Chief Of Defence Staff, DND Deputy Minister Brief Federal Cabinet

    Edmonton Restaurant Won't Mess With Mother Goose That Has Nest Near Patio

    EDMONTON — An Edmonton restaurant says it won't mess with a Canada goose that has a nest near its patio.    

    Edmonton Restaurant Won't Mess With Mother Goose That Has Nest Near Patio

    Famed UFO Researcher Stanton Friedman Dead After Half Century Of Lectures

    FREDERICTON — Stanton T. Friedman, nuclear physicist, lecturer and world-renowned devotee of extraterrestrial existence, has died at the age of 84.    

    Famed UFO Researcher Stanton Friedman Dead After Half Century Of Lectures

    Crown Appeals Acquittal Of Ex-Violin Teacher Who Measured Students' Bare Breasts

    Prosecutors are asking Ontario's highest court to overturn the acquittal of a former violin teacher who measured his teenage students' bare breasts while fitting them for shoulder rests.    

    Crown Appeals Acquittal Of Ex-Violin Teacher Who Measured Students' Bare Breasts

    Judge Awards Businessman $2.5 Million For Suffering 'Hate Speech At Its Worst'

    Ontario Superior Court Justice Jane Ferguson ordered Kevin J. Johnston to pay a total of $2.5 million in damages for defamation to Mohamad Fakih, the owner and founder of Paramount Fine Foods.

    Judge Awards Businessman $2.5 Million For Suffering 'Hate Speech At Its Worst'

    Mounties In Saskatchewan Investigating Video Of Nazi Flag-Burning

    KELLIHER, Sask. — RCMP in Saskatchewan are investigating a video on social media that they say shows someone burning a Nazi flag which a man claimed to have removed from a rural home.

    Mounties In Saskatchewan Investigating Video Of Nazi Flag-Burning