Close X
Tuesday, December 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond stripped of B.C. award

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Mar, 2023 10:57 AM
  • Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond stripped of B.C. award

VANCOUVER - Another award has been stripped from Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, the former judge, law professor and British Columbia representative for children and youth whose claims of Indigenous ancestry have been discredited.

A statement from the BC Civil Liberties Association says it has rescinded the Reg Robson Award given to Turpel-Lafond as part of its 2020 Liberty Awards.

The association says board members believed Turpel-Lafond's representations about her professional accomplishments and Cree heritage when it granted the award recognizing substantial contributions to civil liberties in B.C. and Canada.

The statement says Turpel-Lafond has yet to account for the allegations about her heritage and her claims to various professional accomplishments, such as the award of a Queen's Counsel designation in Saskatchewan, also remain unexplained.

In conferring its award on Turpel-Lafond, the association says it recognizes it "contributed to amplifying … Turpel-Lafond’s claims and position of influence," and that her actions added to the "widespread pattern of Indigenous identity fraud, and the severe harms" related to colonial violence and assimilation.

McGill University, Carleton University and the University of Regina, last month rescinded honorary degrees awarded to Turpel-Lafond and she has returned degrees conferred by two B.C. post-secondary institutions.

"The recent revelations about … Turpel-Lafond’s purported Indigenous identity and professional claims, as well as her lack of accountability or remorse on these matters, have been shocking and disturbing," said the civil liberties association statement.

Her actions have also played a part in "gravely undermining" public confidence in the legal profession and the association says it must follow the lead of Indigenous scholars, leaders and organizations, including the Indigenous Women's Collective, which is demanding all honorary degrees and awards to Turpel-Lafond be revoked.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. minister says her cancer has returned

B.C. minister says her cancer has returned
Selina Robinson told the B.C. legislature that she got the news on Jan. 27. Robinson has previously shared her 2006 diagnosis about a "rare form of intestinal cancer" in a post on social media.    

B.C. minister says her cancer has returned

Federal health offer is $196 billion over a decade

Federal health offer is $196 billion over a decade
There will also be an immediate one-time $2 billion top-up to this year's Canada Health Transfer to help provinces ease the intense pressure on emergency rooms and children's hospitals. Provinces can also get $1.7 billion over five years to increase wages for personal support workers in long-term care and home care.

Federal health offer is $196 billion over a decade

COVID critic died of drug toxicity: B.C. coroner

COVID critic died of drug toxicity: B.C. coroner
The report says Mak Parhar was found by a family member unresponsive in the bathroom of his New Westminster home on Nov. 4, 2021. The coroner's report says Parhar had ethanol, cocaine and fentanyl in his system at the time of death, ruling it accidental due to "mixed illicit drug toxicity."

COVID critic died of drug toxicity: B.C. coroner

West Fraser Timber to curtail Quesnel, B.C., mill

West Fraser Timber to curtail Quesnel, B.C., mill
West Fraser says the downtime at the Cariboo mill will help the company align its production capacity, though its plans may change if the fibre forecasts do. The company says the mill expects to mitigate some of the impact on employees through vacation scheduling and alternative work assignments.

West Fraser Timber to curtail Quesnel, B.C., mill

Climate change pushes B.C. urchins to shallows

Climate change pushes B.C. urchins to shallows
The study's co-author, Rylan Command, said heat domes and heat waves are becoming more common, and understanding how the ocean responds to those changes can have a direct impact on people.

Climate change pushes B.C. urchins to shallows

One-third of Canadians financially worse off: poll

One-third of Canadians financially worse off: poll
According to a Leger poll commissioned by the Association for Canadian Studies, 34 per cent of Canadian households say they're financially worse off compared with a year ago. The majority of respondents, 58 per cent, said their financial situation was about the same as it was a year ago.    

One-third of Canadians financially worse off: poll