Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Devil in the details at roundtable on murdered, missing aboriginal women

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Feb, 2015 02:34 PM

    OTTAWA — Getting Canada's Aboriginal Peoples, the provinces and territories and the federal government to gather together in the same room is no small feat.

    But familiar sticking points are sure to return during this week's roundtable meeting on the issue of murdered and missing aboriginal women — particularly when it comes to deciding who will pay for and administer the parts of a plan to end the violence.

    That could result in some "challenging discussions" among the groups when they gather Friday in the ballroom of a downtown Ottawa hotel, Assembly of First Nations national chief Perry Bellegarde said Wednesday.

    "It'll be the jurisdictional piece — who's paying from the feds and the provinces, who's responsible, you know, in terms of financial investments, that's going to be an issue and ongoing, where the resources are coming from," Bellegarde said in an interview.

    "The who, what, when and why, when it comes to the administration of it."

    Both Bellegarde and Northwest Territories Premier Bob McLeod, who is chairing the meeting, say most of the details of the plan have already been worked out and Friday's meeting will mostly be about putting on the finishing touches.

    But there are still big question marks — including who pays for what.

    "We haven't gotten to that detail," McLeod said.

    The roundtable will bring together families of missing and murdered aboriginal women and girls, groups representing First Nations, Inuit and Metis, and representatives of the provinces, territories and the federal government.

    Four premiers — McLeod, Ontario's Kathleen Wynne, Greg Selinger of Manitoba and Yukon's Darrell Pasloski — are scheduled to attend. The Conservative government, meanwhile, has tapped Aboriginal Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt and Status of Women Minister Kellie Leitch to take part.

    The agenda has been whittled down to three key themes: prevention and awareness; community safety; and policing measures and justice responses.

    That's still a lot to pack into a seven-hour meeting — especially considering that each person is only allowed four minutes to speak on each topic.

    Talk will inevitably turn to a full-blown national inquiry on murdered and missing aboriginal women and girls — something that most people in the room agree is needed but which remains a no-go for the Conservative government.

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper and some of his cabinet ministers have insisted that enough people have studied the problem and that the time has come to take action.

    Still, calls for a national inquiry have been growing since RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson revealed last year that nearly 1,200 aboriginal women have been murdered or gone missing in Canada in the last 30 years — hundreds more than previously thought.

    One of the challenges for McLeod and moderator Marie Delorme is to keep people from straying off the agenda and into what would probably end up being a fruitless discussion about a national inquiry.

    "In my view, we have to guard against that," McLeod said.

    "I don't see any reason why we can't have a number of different activities going on. One doesn't preclude the other. I don't see why we should preclude having a national roundtable or national roundtables at the expense of a national inquiry. I think we can have both a national roundtable and also continue to call for a national inquiry."

    There's already talk of the groups meeting again in a year's time to take stock of their progress.

    "It's not just a roundtable to dialogue and talk," Bellegarde said. "It's all about getting something done."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Peladeau likely to dominate Quebec politics in 2015 with PQ leadership run

    Peladeau likely to dominate Quebec politics in 2015 with PQ leadership run
    MONTREAL — Quebec media mogul Pierre Karl Peladeau's journey to become the father of a country begins in earnest in 2015.

    Peladeau likely to dominate Quebec politics in 2015 with PQ leadership run

    B.C. Man Accused Of Attacking Three Women Facing Multiple Charges

    B.C. Man Accused Of Attacking Three Women Facing Multiple Charges
    PORT COQUITLAM, B.C. — A B.C. man is facing multiple charges for allegedly attacking three women, stealing a purse and vehicle and showing up at one victim's home with a firearm.

    B.C. Man Accused Of Attacking Three Women Facing Multiple Charges

    CF-18s hit targets as Kurds launch offensive to break Sinjar mountain siege

    CF-18s hit targets as Kurds launch offensive to break Sinjar mountain siege
    OTTAWA — Canadian warplanes have been in action in Iraq once again, bombing enemy targets ahead of Kurdish Peshmerga forces who are pushing to break the siege in the Sinjar mountains.

    CF-18s hit targets as Kurds launch offensive to break Sinjar mountain siege

    Supreme Court of Canada will not hear Rwandan war criminal's appeal

    Supreme Court of Canada will not hear Rwandan war criminal's appeal
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada will not hear the appeal of the first person ever found guilty under Canada's war-crimes legislation.

    Supreme Court of Canada will not hear Rwandan war criminal's appeal

    First Nations Band Threatens Legal Action Over B.C. Mine Tailings Spill

    First Nations Band Threatens Legal Action Over B.C. Mine Tailings Spill
    VANCOUVER — A First Nations band is threatening legal action against a mining company and the B.C. government over a taillings spill in the southern Interior.

    First Nations Band Threatens Legal Action Over B.C. Mine Tailings Spill

    Jurors at Luka Rocco Magnotta trial into third day of deliberations

    Jurors at Luka Rocco Magnotta trial into third day of deliberations
    MONTREAL — Jurors at Luka Rocco Magnotta's murder trial are into their third day of deliberations.

    Jurors at Luka Rocco Magnotta trial into third day of deliberations