Close X
Sunday, November 10, 2024
ADVT 
National

Children's Advocate Calls For Missing, Murdered Women Inquiry To Probe Suicides

Darpan News Desk, 08 Mar, 2016 12:36 PM
    WINNIPEG — Manitoba's children's advocate says an alarming number of indigenous girls are committing suicide — a disturbing trend which should be included in the upcoming inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women.
     
    Darlene MacDonald says she made the suggestion to federal Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett in a letter last week but hasn't received a reply.
     
    Of 33 suicides MacDonald has investigated in the last three years, 17 were indigenous girls.
     
    "We just have to stop this," she said in an interview Monday. "Whether youth go missing or die at the hands of others, or whether they feel so much despair that they die by their own choice, the loss of these youth is a tragedy. It needs to be included in the scope of national dialogue."
     
    The Liberals have said they want an inquiry into Canada's approximately 1,200 missing and murdered indigenous sitting by the summer. Bennett and other ministers have been holding consultations across the country to determine the scope of the inquiry, but MacDonald said she wasn't invited to the Winnipeg meeting.
     
    Her comments come after several suicides by members of Manitoba's Cross Lake First Nation. The youngest was a 14-year-old girl.
     
    Canada wants to prevent indigenous girls from dying as a result of violence, but MacDonald suggests the country "will be doomed to fail if we do not remember those who continue to die by suicide."
     
     
    Some of the reasons why some girls take their own lives are the same as factors that lead them to be exploited and vulnerable, she said. Many don't feel they have family or support, MacDonald said, or they have friends or family members who have committed suicide and it becomes an acceptable choice similar to drugs or alcohol.
     
    "That is so concerning. We need to come together as a society, as a community, to give these kids some alternatives and to look at the stories and learn from them.
     
    "Children need to be offered hope."
     
    A spokesperson for Bennett said she wasn't available for an interview and issued a statement calling the loss of human life through suicide "tragic."
     
    The statement didn't address the call to include suicides in the inquiry. It only said the government is consulting with various groups to determine "the best possible inquiry to address violence against indigenous women and girls."
     
    Grand Chief Sheila North Wilson, who represents northern Manitoba First Nations including Cross Lake, said suicides need attention — whether that's in the form of the formal inquiry or not.
     
     
    Many ambitious indigenous girls are frustrated living in overcrowded reserve housing without proper access to education or employment opportunities, she said. Some become depressed, suffer from low self-esteem and don't feel as if they belong.
     
    That makes them vulnerable to suicidal thoughts and "predators who take advantage of how sad and lost they feel," North Wilson said.
     
    "I hope ... the inquiry will point out the lack of opportunity and the lack of resources available to indigenous girls and women and that will, in turn, start to address the feelings of suicide."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada-U.S. Cross-Border Police Project 'Postponed' Over Differences

    Canada-U.S. Cross-Border Police Project 'Postponed' Over Differences
    The so-called next-generation border project has been put off as discussions continue with U.S. officials — almost four years after pilot projects were supposed to begin, said Staff Sgt. Julie Gagnon, a force spokeswoman.

    Canada-U.S. Cross-Border Police Project 'Postponed' Over Differences

    Quebec Grants Another $500,000 To Montreal Anti-Radicalization Centre

    Quebec Grants Another $500,000 To Montreal Anti-Radicalization Centre
    MONTREAL — The Quebec government has granted another $500,000 to an anti-radicalization centre in Montreal.

    Quebec Grants Another $500,000 To Montreal Anti-Radicalization Centre

    Texting Employee Fired From Surrey Gym After Facebook Video Of Girl Stuck On Climbing Wall

    Texting Employee Fired From Surrey Gym After Facebook Video Of Girl Stuck On Climbing Wall
    The 55-second video posted on Facebook shows a young woman who appears to be on her phone sitting at the bottom of a climbing wall while a girl struggles to climb it and cries 

    Texting Employee Fired From Surrey Gym After Facebook Video Of Girl Stuck On Climbing Wall

    Justin Trudeau Interview To Air On '60 Minutes' On Sunday, Ahead Of White House Visit

    Justin Trudeau Interview To Air On '60 Minutes' On Sunday, Ahead Of White House Visit
    A profile interview with Justin Trudeau is to air Sunday on the iconic CBS program "60 Minutes," just days before the prime minister travels to Washington, D.C., for a state visit.

    Justin Trudeau Interview To Air On '60 Minutes' On Sunday, Ahead Of White House Visit

    Former Flight Attendant Sues WestJet After Alleged Sex Assault By Pilot In Hawaii

    Former Flight Attendant Sues WestJet After Alleged Sex Assault By Pilot In Hawaii
    Mandalena Lewis alleges an unnamed WestJet pilot pulled her onto a hotel bed and proceeded to kiss and grope her during a stopover in Hawaii in January 2010.  

    Former Flight Attendant Sues WestJet After Alleged Sex Assault By Pilot In Hawaii

    Attempt To Create Rare Disease Committee Appears Set To Fail

    Attempt To Create Rare Disease Committee Appears Set To Fail
    A Progressive Conservative attempt to get an all-party committee to develop a rare disease strategy in Ontario appears set to fail today without Liberal support.

    Attempt To Create Rare Disease Committee Appears Set To Fail