Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feminism Missing From Consultations On Murdered Women's Inquiry: Advocates

The Canadian Press, 17 Jan, 2016 01:00 PM
    VANCOUVER — A chairwoman of Vancouver's annual memorial march for missing and murdered aboriginal women says she's concerned a national inquiry will leave out a crucial issue — feminism.
     
    Fay Blaney, who co-chairs the February 14th Women's Memorial March Committee said the starting point of an inquiry must be the barriers indigenous women face in Canadian society.
     
    Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett is touring the country to meet with families, survivors and aboriginal representatives to hear what they want from an inquiry.
     
    Blaney attended an all-day meeting in Vancouver last Wednesday and wants to meet with Bennett to discuss the inquiry's parameters.
     
    "It needs to proceed from a feminist perspective. This is an issue of indigenous women's equality," she said. "I didn't hear that coming from them."
     
    Her fears are part of a broader concern among front-line workers and advocacy groups that they are being shut out of the process. Blaney said the consultations appear to be focused on families, and while it's important for them to have a voice, they're only one perspective.
     
    "Each one has a unique story to tell and it's instructive in terms of the data and information that comes from those stories, and it can lead to healing of the families involved," she said.
     
    "But my position is that the women in the Downtown Eastside and other urban centres across this country are estranged from families."
     
    Blaney's committee advocates year-round for women in the city's troubled Downtown Eastside and is one of several groups, including Vancouver Rape Relief and Women's Shelter, that have sent a letter to Bennett asking for a special meeting.
     
    Rape Relief spokeswoman Hilla Kerner said approaching the inquiry using a feminist framework would mean examining the power relationships that have an impact on aboriginal women.
     
    "Aboriginal women are vulnerable to male violence first and foremost because they are women, then because they are aboriginal, and then because they are poor," she said. "The intersection between colonialism and sexism plays a crucial role."
     
    Dawn Lavell-Harvard, president of the Native Women's Association of Canada, is also calling on the government to hold separate meetings with front-line workers and grassroots groups.
     
    She said she was told before the meetings started that they were for families only.
     
    "We absolutely understand and respect the need for the families to go first," she said. "We just want to make sure that there is an opportunity for those meetings with those people who do the work on the ground."
     
    Sabrina Williams, a spokeswoman for the ministry, said front-line organizations are invited to the meetings, which are scheduled to end in Ottawa on Feb. 15.
     
    She said participants have stressed the need for an inquiry to have an indigenous perspective and address the root causes of violence and the effects of residential schools.
     
    Some families have complained that the meetings are being rushed. Williams said every effort was being made to ensure relatives have as much notice as possible to participate.
     
    "We are trying to find the balance between people who want us to get on with the inquiry but also the fact that we want to get it right," she said in a statement.
     
    Candice Stevenson, whose mother went missing 33 years ago, said she only had a week's notice before the Vancouver meeting and she felt like she had to compete for a chance to talk.
     
    "Everybody's rushed, rushed, rushed. People don't get to really speak their minds," she said. 
     
    But she said the government shouldn't wait for the inquiry to take action on missing and murdered women, including increasing police resources to investigate cases.
     
    "We already know what's wrong. The violence against women, the systemic racism — we already know those problems exist."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Delta Police Warn Of Possible Fentanyl-Laced Cocaine After Overdoses

    Delta Police Warn Of Possible Fentanyl-Laced Cocaine After Overdoses
    DELTA, B.C. — Delta Police say two people have been treated in hospital after using cocaine and inadvertently overdosing on fentanyl.

    Delta Police Warn Of Possible Fentanyl-Laced Cocaine After Overdoses

    New Calf Born To Endangered Orca Population In British Columbia Waters

    New Calf Born To Endangered Orca Population In British Columbia Waters
    VANCOUVER — Researchers say a new calf has been born into an endangered orca population off British Columbia's coast.

    New Calf Born To Endangered Orca Population In British Columbia Waters

    Brrrrrrrr: Former Refugees Say Canadian Winters Can Be A Shock For Newcomers

    Brrrrrrrr: Former Refugees Say Canadian Winters Can Be A Shock For Newcomers
    Abukar fled Somalia and lived in Egypt as a refugee before arriving in Canada in 2011. He lived in Ontario before moving to Saskatoon in the winter of 2013.

    Brrrrrrrr: Former Refugees Say Canadian Winters Can Be A Shock For Newcomers

    Christy Clark Says Trudeau Legitimizing Unaccountable Senate, B.C. Under-representation

    Christy Clark Says Trudeau Legitimizing Unaccountable Senate, B.C. Under-representation
    Christy Clark says the new process for appointing senators on merit will give legitimacy to an unelected, unaccountable upper house in which her province will remain grossly under-represented.

    Christy Clark Says Trudeau Legitimizing Unaccountable Senate, B.C. Under-representation

    Extremists Could Use Peaceful Demonstrations As Cover, Intel Report Claims

    Extremists Could Use Peaceful Demonstrations As Cover, Intel Report Claims
    The federal analysis of threats to the passenger rail system introduces a new twist to the often tense debate over state scrutiny of environmental demonstrators — that otherwise harmless activists might unwittingly harbour dangerous terrorists.

    Extremists Could Use Peaceful Demonstrations As Cover, Intel Report Claims

    Teen Urges Justin Trudeau Government To Help Secure Release Of Dad Detained In UAE

    Teen Urges Justin Trudeau Government To Help Secure Release Of Dad Detained In UAE
    An Ontario teen is calling on the new Liberal government to secure the release of her father, who has been languishing in a United Arab Emirates prison without charge for more than a year.

    Teen Urges Justin Trudeau Government To Help Secure Release Of Dad Detained In UAE