Close X
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Families call for inquiry after nine Indigenous people killed in police interactions

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Oct, 2024 03:54 PM
  • Families call for inquiry after nine Indigenous people killed in police interactions

A group of Black and Indigenous women say they want a national public inquiry into a recent spate of police-involved deaths, after nine Indigenous people were killed in interactions with police in August and September.

About two dozen people gathered on Parliament Hill on Tuesday, including the families of eight people who died. 

The families say accountability and justice for the deaths of their loved ones is difficult to get, and that concrete actions need to happen to address police brutality and to offer support and resources for the people affected.

Laura Holland, a Wet’suwet’en woman and the mother of Jared Lowndes, said police-involved killings are a state of emergency for Indigenous people.

"We’re being killed on the streets, in our homes, everywhere, and no one is saying anything," she said, adding that it has been impossible to get justice in her son's death. 

"When police kill one member of your family, they kill your whole family."

Lowndes was shot by RCMP in 2021. The B.C. police watchdog recommended the Crown consider charges against the officers involved in his killing, but the province's prosecution service decided not to charge them last April.

Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Gary Anandasangaree earlier said the recent string of deaths was troubling and he encouraged police services to ensure accountability and build trust.

"We must work together with Indigenous partners. We have a responsibility to advance Indigenous-led solutions that address the needs of communities and ensure their safety and security," he said in a statement on social media.

On Tuesday, a spokesperson from Anandasangaree's office said the department will support what communities want and need to address the issue.

A similar call for a police inquiry was raised last week as the Assembly of First Nations gathered in Calgary.

At that meeting, Blood Tribe Chief Roy Fox spoke on behalf of member Jon Wells and his family, and called for a public inquiry into his death.

"We have not received any kind of support or any kind of sign of empathy from the provincial government, nor the federal government," Fox told the assembly's attendees.

MPs also had an emergency debate last month about the deaths, with NDP MP Lori Idlout calling it a "disturbing pattern."

In a letter to House Speaker Greg Fergus asking for the debate, Idlout lambasted what she called a lack of media coverage of the issue and inaction by the government to pass legislation on First Nations policing.

"As parliamentarians, it is on us to show leadership and take responsibility to keep our institutions accountable. People across Canada must know their Parliament is addressing the institutional violence in their communities as a critical and immediate priority," she wrote.

"There is a clear, urgent interest for Parliament to debate this disturbing pattern, so that parliamentarians can discuss immediate measures that can be taken to save Indigenous lives, today."

Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak, the national chief for the Assembly of First Nations, said the deaths demonstrate systemic issues across the country. She demanded accountability from police through independent investigations into each of the deaths.

"Time and again, we have witnessed the consequences of law enforcement’s failure to employ de-escalation techniques and culturally informed practices," she said in a statement last month.

"We will continue to call for action to address these failures and expect full transparency in cases where lives have been needlessly lost."

The families gathered in Ottawa on Tuesday said any potential inquiry must be Indigenous-led and include national data. They also said no federal ministers or opposition parties have agreed to meet with them to discuss the matter.

"This is also an invitation for the federal government to reckon publicly with the statistics that are often obscured," said Meenakshi Mannoe, a community organizer with the Defund 604 Network.

"As Laura Holland mentioned, this violence against Black and Indigenous people is actually quite fundamental to Canada, and it is actually a part of how this state exists. The state exists because Indigenous people are under constant threat of police death and police fatality."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Indo-Canadian man fined $20K for immigration fraud

Indo-Canadian man fined $20K for immigration fraud
An Indian-origin man has been fined $20,000 for his role in a scheme that charged newcomers tens of thousands for permits to work in the Canadian province of Manitoba. Avtar Singh Sohi, 42, pleaded guilty on Monday to misrepresentation under the Canada Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. 

Indo-Canadian man fined $20K for immigration fraud

Two men charged after blind, non-verbal woman abducted in stolen van in Edmonton

Two men charged after blind, non-verbal woman abducted in stolen van in Edmonton
Two men are facing charges after a van was stolen in Edmonton with a 40-year-old woman inside who is blind and non-verbal. Edmonton police issued an Amber Alert on Thursday for the woman.  

Two men charged after blind, non-verbal woman abducted in stolen van in Edmonton

Home sales to dip in BC over the next year

Home sales to dip in BC over the next year
The B-C Real Estate Association says "the anchor that is (Canada's) monetary policy" will continue to weigh down home sales in this province over the next year. The association has released its fourth-quarter housing forecast showing residential sales are expected to dip nearly five per cent to just under 77-thousand units this year.

Home sales to dip in BC over the next year

Guilty plea in Chinatown stabbings

Guilty plea in Chinatown stabbings
A 44-year-old Vancouver man has pleaded guilty to two separate, unprovoked stabbings that happened in -- or near -- the city's Chinatown neighbourhood in September of last year.  In one stabbing, a cyclist working as a food delivery driver had his throat slashed but survived, while police say the other victim suffered "life-altering" injuries.

Guilty plea in Chinatown stabbings

Avian flu at Chilliwack poultry

Avian flu at Chilliwack poultry
Avian flu has been detected in birds at a second commercial poultry operation in Chilliwack. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says the infection was confirmed yesterday -- four days after another farm was quarantined and its flock was ordered destroyed to halt the spread of the highly infectious illness.

Avian flu at Chilliwack poultry

Rules were followed in alleged Islamophobic incident involving U.K. MP: Air Canada

Rules were followed in alleged Islamophobic incident involving U.K. MP: Air Canada
Air Canada says its staff followed procedure when it delayed a British MP for extra questions in what has been described as an Islamophobic incident during a recent diplomatic trip to Canada. Mohammad Yasin was pulled aside for questioning at London’s Heathrow Airport while other lawmakers he was travelling with were allowed through, and was stopped again at airports in Montreal and Toronto.

Rules were followed in alleged Islamophobic incident involving U.K. MP: Air Canada