Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Families walk Highway of Tears before missing, murdered Indigenous women hearing

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Sep, 2017 10:25 AM
    Gladys Radek raised a fist in the air and wept as she reached the end of her 350-kilometre journey along British Columbia's Highway of Tears.
     
    The Indigenous grandmother finished her walk along the notorious stretch of Highway 16 for the seventh and final time on Monday. It is the same highway where her beloved niece Tamara Lynn Chipman disappeared.
     
    Outside a community centre in Smithers, B.C., her voice shook as she spoke to those who had walked alongside her, including commissioners from the national inquiry into missing and murdered women.
     
    "I want to thank you all for standing so proud and loud, to show our commissioners that we have love for our missing and murdered women," she said through tears.
     
    "I'm very proud of this moment right now because when Tamara went missing, nobody cared. When Tamara went missing, there were many others who were already missing, many others who had been murdered."
     
    Dozens of women have disappeared or been killed along the highway between Prince Rupert and Prince George in central B.C. 
     
    Radek and other family members and advocates left Prince Rupert on Thursday and arrived Monday in Smithers, where the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls will hold hearings starting Tuesday.
     
    The walkers were accompanied by vehicles and have covered sections of the route in a relay fashion, allowing them to complete the walk of hundreds of kilometres over the span of a few days.
     
    During the final stretch through the town of Smithers, Radek, who is missing a leg, drove a car covered in photographs of women who have disappeared or been killed. She wept behind the wheel as passersby waved and honked their horns.
     
    Inquiry commissioner Michele Audette joined the group three days ago, while Chief Commissioner Marion Buller joined on Monday. Commissioner Qajaq Robinson was supposed to attend the hearings but had to bow out due to a family emergency.
     
    Audette said she walked to honour the resilience and strength of the families who will be speaking for the first time to the inquiry. The hearings will be powerful, she said.
     
    "I feel it since I arrived, there's a lot of emotion, lots of anxiety also or stress, because it's the first time for them," she said. "Just being there beside them and listening, maybe it's helped."
     
    The inquiry has been plagued by controversy, including the resignation of commissioner Marilyn Poitras this summer and complaints from families about poor communications and delays.
     
    Buller told a Senate committee last week that the inquiry's work has been hampered by federal bureaucracy. 
     
    Rhonda Lee McIsaac, who lives in Haida Gwaii and has Ojibway heritage, participated in the walk for the first time and said it was a moving experience.
     
    "I'm walking for everybody who cannot walk," said McIsaac. "I have lost a loved one. I grew up in foster care and I was adopted out. This is part of my story."
     
    More than 40 people have signed up to speak at the Smithers hearings, which run through Thursday. They are the second hearings held by the inquiry after it visited Whitehorse in May.
     
    The inquiry is set to visit nine communities this fall, including Edmonton, Winnipeg and Thunder Bay, Ont.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Three Dead In Separate Metro Vancouver Shootings Just 12 Hours Apart

    Three Dead In Separate Metro Vancouver Shootings Just 12 Hours Apart
    Police say a man and woman have died in what appears to be a targeted shooting in Langley, B.C. About 12 hours earlier, a man was shot to death in an attack in Abbotsford that police also described as targeted

    Three Dead In Separate Metro Vancouver Shootings Just 12 Hours Apart

    IHIT Investigating Surrey Man Pardeep Singh's Murder

    IHIT Investigating Surrey Man Pardeep Singh's Murder
    Surrey: On August 29, 2017 at 8:45 p.m. the Surrey RCMP responded to a report of a shooting in the 6300 block of 166 Street. 

    IHIT Investigating Surrey Man Pardeep Singh's Murder

    B.C. Schools Scrambling To Hire Teachers To Meet New Class-size Standards

    B.C. Schools Scrambling To Hire Teachers To Meet New Class-size Standards
    VANCOUVER — School districts in British Columbia are scrambling to hire thousands of teachers ahead of the new school year to satisfy a court decision that reinstates standards on class size.

    B.C. Schools Scrambling To Hire Teachers To Meet New Class-size Standards

    Toronto Neurosurgeon Mohammed Shamji Charged In The Death Of His Wife Denied Bail

    Toronto Neurosurgeon Mohammed Shamji Charged In The Death Of His Wife Denied Bail
    TORONTO — A Toronto neurosurgeon charged with first-degree murder in the death of his wife has been denied bail.

    Toronto Neurosurgeon Mohammed Shamji Charged In The Death Of His Wife Denied Bail

    Naming Rights For Arenas Is The Norm: Why ScotiaBank Bet $800m On NHL Stadium

    Naming Rights For Arenas Is The Norm: Why ScotiaBank Bet $800m On NHL Stadium
    VANCOUVER — Scotiabank's $800-million deal for the naming rights to the Air Canada Centre, home of the NHL's Toronto Maple Leafs, is the latest move by a corporation to corner the sponsorship market of the country's national pastime.

    Naming Rights For Arenas Is The Norm: Why ScotiaBank Bet $800m On NHL Stadium

    Math Scores Flat And Falling Among Ontario Elementary Students Despite Funding

    Math Scores Flat And Falling Among Ontario Elementary Students Despite Funding
     Math test scores among public elementary school students in Ontario have not improved — in some cases they have decreased slightly — despite a $60-million "renewed math strategy" the government had hoped would help solve the problem.

    Math Scores Flat And Falling Among Ontario Elementary Students Despite Funding