Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Colten Boushie's Mother Says Racism Is On Full Display In Saskatchewan

The Canadian Press, 13 Jun, 2018 11:33 AM
    REGINA — The mother of a young Indigenous man who was shot and killed on a Saskatchewan farm says racism is on full display in the province every day.
     
     
    Debbie Baptiste said she sees racism everywhere — in private business, in the courts and in the government, where Indigenous children are being taken into foster care.
     
     
    "It's like the KKK (Ku Klux Klan) is no longer wearing their mask. They're out and about," Baptiste said Tuesday.
     
     
    Baptiste's son Colten Boushie was killed after being shot in the head on a farm near the community of Biggar in August 2016.
     
     
    The landowner, Gerald Stanley, was acquitted of second-degree murder after testifying that his gun went off accidentally.
     
     
    Stanley said he was trying to scare some Indigenous young people that he thought were stealing from him.
     
     
    Baptiste is in Regina to show her support for the Justice for Our Stolen Children camp that's set up outside the Saskatchewan legislature.
     
     
    She said she is at the camp for her son, but also because she had two grandchildren taken by Child and Family Services.
     
     
    "It's very peaceful and I'm pretty sure my son would want me here," she said.
     
     
    The camp was set up on Feb. 28 — shortly after the Boushie and Tina Fontaine cases both resulted in acquittals.
     
     
    Fontaine was 15-years-old when she disappeared in Winnipeg in 2014.
     
     
    Her body was pulled from the Red River eight days later wrapped in a duvet cover and weighed down by rocks. A jury found Raymond Cormier not guilty in February of second-degree murder.
     
     
    Baptiste said that the camp has frequently received racist taunts since she's been there, including from a group of people playing frisbee nearby. Vehicles also drive by to tell the campers to "get off our land."
     
     
    Boushie's mother is also watching the trial of white homeowner Peter Khill, who is accused of shooting Indigenous man Jon Styres in front of Khill's rural home outside Hamilton, Ont., in February 2016.
     
     
    The Khill case has some similarities to that of Boushie's.
     
     
    "I hope, pray, they get the justice that they're asking for," Baptiste said.
     
     
    Camp supporter Prescott Demas said that more than 1,300 people have stopped by the camp since it started.
     
     
    "It's nice to have her (Baptiste) here especially since everything started was from the Gerald Stanley verdict," Demas said.
     
     
    Demas, 47, said that campers want a meeting with the government, although he doesn't believe it will happen. The camp has received two eviction notices.
     
     
    "I don't know what my expectations are because I know that this government isn't interested in listening," Demas said. "Any expectations of them actually coming out are kind of really high hopes."
     
     
    Ministry of Justice spokeswoman Jennifer Graham said the government has tried to arrange two meetings with the campers but the locations were rejected.
     
     
    "The group has been advised that their ongoing encampment in the park is not permitted and they must vacate," she said an email. "Therefore, government officials will not be meeting with the group at the encampment."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Single Homes In Metro Vancouver Nudge Mark Where Prices Can Fall: Board

    Single Homes In Metro Vancouver Nudge Mark Where Prices Can Fall: Board
    Home sales across Metro Vancouver tumbled last month, when compared with May 2017 and the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says that raises the potential of lower prices for some types of homes.

    Single Homes In Metro Vancouver Nudge Mark Where Prices Can Fall: Board

    Indian American Millionaire Techie SANJAY TRIPATHY Charged With Sexual Abuse, Assault

    Indian American Millionaire Techie SANJAY TRIPATHY Charged With Sexual Abuse, Assault
    An Indian American IT executive has been convicted of sexually assaulting, choking and beating a woman he met on a dating website and faces up to 25 years in jail, the media reported.

    Indian American Millionaire Techie SANJAY TRIPATHY Charged With Sexual Abuse, Assault

    World's Southern-Most Polar Bears Now Declining After Years Of Stability: Survey

    An exhaustive survey of the world's most southerly polar bears has found a significant drop in their numbers.

    World's Southern-Most Polar Bears Now Declining After Years Of Stability: Survey

    Ottawa Will Work With Canadian Aluminum, Steel Companies To Ensure Jobs Safe: PM

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau pledged Friday to work with Canadian companies hit by punishing U.S. tariffs to protect jobs and workers north of the border, but offered no details about what that might mean as the bilateral trade war continued to escalate.

    Ottawa Will Work With Canadian Aluminum, Steel Companies To Ensure Jobs Safe: PM

    Men Must Pass The Baton To Achieve Gender Parity, Female Leaders Say

    Men Must Pass The Baton To Achieve Gender Parity, Female Leaders Say
    HALIFAX — Women make up fewer than a fifth of Canadian mayors, and a group of female leaders say men in power need to pass the baton if such inequities are to change.

    Men Must Pass The Baton To Achieve Gender Parity, Female Leaders Say

    Halifax Legion Bars Group That Questions Immigration, Multiculturalism

    Halifax Legion Bars Group That Questions Immigration, Multiculturalism
    HALIFAX — A Calgary-based group with controversial views on immigration and multiculturalism is no longer allowed to host a town hall at a Royal Canadian Legion in Halifax.

    Halifax Legion Bars Group That Questions Immigration, Multiculturalism