Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Reports contradict PM's view on aboriginal women victims

Jennifer Ditchburn, The Canadian Press, 03 Sep, 2014 02:14 PM
    OTTAWA - Dozens of federal, provincial and community studies compiled by the Conservative government appear to contradict the prime minister's contention that the problem of missing and murdered aboriginal women isn't a "sociological phenomenon."
     
    But some in the aboriginal community don't quibble with the government's other main response to calls for a public inquiry — that there has been more than enough research.
     
    Officials point to a non-exhaustive list of 40 studies conducted on the issue between 1996 and 2013.
     
    A closer look at the research shows that in nearly every case, the authors or participants highlight the "root" or systemic causes of violence against aboriginal women and their marginalization in society.
     
    The legacy of colonization, including the displacement and dispossession linked with residential schools and other policies, are cited frequently in the reports. The impact of poverty and lack of housing are also cited as root causes of violence against aboriginal women.
     
    "There are root causes of violence in the aboriginal communities that include things like poverty and racism and this is why it's incredibly important for us to work with organizations, aboriginal organizations, across the country...," Rona Ambrose, then status of women minister, told a parliamentary hearing in 2011.
     
    Harper has offered a different perspective.
     
    "I think we should not view this as sociological phenomenon. We should view it as crime," he said last month.
     
    "It is crime, against innocent people, and it needs to be addressed as such."
     
    The government's related position has been that there have been enough studies — the focus needs to be on action.
     
    "What we don't need, is yet another study on top of the some 40 studies and reports that have already been done, that made specific recommendations which are being pursued, to delay ongoing action," Justice Minister Peter MacKay said last week.
     
    Some inside the aboriginal community agree there have been enough studies, but there are varying opinions on whether an inquiry would just go over the same ground.
     
    One 2005 report prepared by three B.C. community groups, entitled "Researched to Death," pointed to the "striking similarities" in research and recommendations done up to that point.
     
    "The only outstanding element is action," the authors wrote.
     
    Dawn Harvard, president of the Ontario Native Women's Association, agrees there has already been substantial research on the sociological causes of violence against aboriginal women.
     
    But she says a national inquiry wouldn't be about the sociology, but rather about determining what specific policies and initiatives are needed to address specific community problems — in-depth research that smaller groups don't have the resources to do.
     
    "The sociological studies have identified that there is a problem, so your inquiry is going to get into the nitty-gritty nuts and bolts of what is this problem all about," said Harvard.
     
    "And one would hope that therefore we would have a much more effective response when we come out of it."
     
    For Michelle Audette, president of the Native Women's Association of Canada, an inquiry would be an accountability exercise in a non-partisan forum — akin to the Gomery commission on the sponsorship scandal or the current Charbonneau commission into corruption in Quebec's construction industry.
     
    "Do we do another research (report)? No," said Audette. "But this inquiry will bring us together and say, why didn't we implement those (prior) recommendations? Why are we not putting in place legislation that will force our police forces to automatically exchange data?"
     
    Kate Rexe, who worked on the Sisters in Spirit research and policy initiative on missing and murdered aboriginal women, takes a different perspective.
     
    She says that while an inquiry would provide public recognition for the victims' families, it won't necessarily reach the required level of detail.
     
    "If we're looking at a 30-year time span over a number of different police services, in various communities that have had varying levels of response of police to the families and the communities, you're not going to get the answers that you would hopefully need," said Rexe.
     
    "I don't necessarily agree with just having more research for the sake of research."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Lost In Manitoba Wilderness For 3 Days, Man Lived On All-Dressed Chips, Rainwater

    Lost In Manitoba Wilderness For 3 Days, Man Lived On All-Dressed Chips, Rainwater
    Christopher Cloutier was camping with friends in Nopiming Provincial Park in southeastern Manitoba when they got separated.

    Lost In Manitoba Wilderness For 3 Days, Man Lived On All-Dressed Chips, Rainwater

    B.C. Teachers And Employer Add Bargaining Committees To Meeting With Mediator

    B.C. Teachers And Employer Add Bargaining Committees To Meeting With Mediator
    VANCOUVER - Teachers and the B.C. government's negotiator are expected to bring their bargaining committees to discussions with veteran mediator Vince Ready today.

    B.C. Teachers And Employer Add Bargaining Committees To Meeting With Mediator

    B.C. Tour Bus Crash: RCMP Say They Have Footage; Speed Not Factor

    B.C. Tour Bus Crash: RCMP Say They Have Footage; Speed Not Factor
    MERRITT, B.C. - The Mounties say a dashboard camera from a tractor-trailer captured a tour bus rollover that injured dozens of people on a B.C. highway and it appears speed is not a factor.

    B.C. Tour Bus Crash: RCMP Say They Have Footage; Speed Not Factor

    Diner en Blanc Vancouver 2014

    Diner en Blanc Vancouver 2014
    The normally green David Lam Park in Vancouver’s Yaletown district turned into a sea of white for the third annual Vancouver Dîner en Blanc outdoor dining phenomenon last week. 

    Diner en Blanc Vancouver 2014

    Remains found in B.C. matched to 20-year-old Ontario man missing since 2003

    Remains found in B.C. matched to 20-year-old Ontario man missing since 2003
    NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. - Human remains found in the mountains near North Vancouver have been identified as those of a 20-year-old Ontario man who went missing more than a decade ago while visiting his grandmother in British Columbia.

    Remains found in B.C. matched to 20-year-old Ontario man missing since 2003

    9-Year-Old Surrey Girl Abducted From Bedroom, Sexually Assaulted

    9-Year-Old Surrey Girl Abducted From Bedroom, Sexually Assaulted
    SURREY, B.C. - Police say a nine-year-old girl was abducted from her bedroom while she slept and sexually assaulted by a man who then left her in a nearby yard in Surrey, B.C.

    9-Year-Old Surrey Girl Abducted From Bedroom, Sexually Assaulted