Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trudeau government given failing grade for lack of action plan on MMIWG

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2020 07:14 PM
  • Trudeau government given failing grade for lack of action plan on MMIWG

It was Sonya Nadine Mae Cywink's 31st birthday when she went missing in Ontario in mid-August of 1994.

She was with child.

She had been planning to celebrate her birthday by meeting her sister, Meggie Cywink, at a Toronto Blue Jays game. But she never showed up.

Eleven days later, her body was found at the Southwold Earthworks National Historical Site, south of London, Ont., wearing only a T-shirt and socks. Her cause of death was described as blunt force trauma.

"Obviously, my grief, and the anxiety of never knowing what happened in the final moments of Sonya's life have haunted me," Cywink said Wednesday.

She said she is disappointed the massive three-year effort of the National Inquiry on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls has not led to change.

"Families, communities, and allies have not received any information about what governments — either federal or provincial — have been doing over the past year on this file," she said.

"I can tell you that, whatever it is, it has had little or no impact on the families left behind," Cywink said. "It has brought us no solace and it has not changed the violence we witness or the genocide we survive."

The inquiry delivered its final report June 3, 2019, concluding that decades of systemic racism and human rights violations had contributed to the deaths and disappearances of hundreds of Indigenous women and girls and that it constituted a genocide.

In a report card released Wednesday to mark the anniversary of final report's release, the Native Women's Association of Canada found little has been done to address the inquiry's 231 calls for justice in the last 12 months. It awarded the federal government a "resounding fail."

"Instead of a national action plan, we are left with a lack-of-action plan," said association president Lorraine Whitman.

"The sad fact is, we cannot afford to do nothing in the face of the violence that continues to take the lives of First Nations, Metis and Inuit women."

Last week, Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett said Ottawa is delaying its intended release of the national action plan this month because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Bennett said she understands the urgency of the situation and that people are impatient, but said many of the same people on the front lines of the COVID-19 response are also those Ottawa needs to work with on a national action plan.

Whitman said using the pandemic as an excuse for not delivering a plan is a "double slap in the face" to Indigenous women who are facing even greater risks of violence because of isolation measures aimed at slowing the spread of the novel coronavirus.

"These are things we have been trying to tell the government, but they have not been doing much listening," Whitman said.

In a joint statement Wednesday, the national inquiry's four commissioners said they "deplore inaction on the part of some governments."

"As the final report asserts, the calls for justice are not mere recommendations or a quaint list of best practices — they are legal imperatives rooted in Canada’s obligations under international and domestic human rights norms and laws," the commissioners said.

"As the ongoing levels of violence attest, the fundamental human rights and Indigenous rights of Indigenous women, girls and (two-spirit) people continue to be violated daily in Canada, and Indigenous women, girls and (two-spirit) people continue to be subjected to colonial violence, physical violence, disappearances and murder."

Bennett, Women and Gender Equality Minister Maryam Monsef, Justice Minister David Lametti, Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller, Canadian Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault and Public Safety Minister Bill Blair also issued a statement to mark the anniversary.

In it, they said violence against Indigenous women is an "ongoing national tragedy" that governments are working to address.

While work on a national action plan continues, the ministers list a number of federal initiatives already in place to begin addressing issues identified in the inquiry's interim report, which was released in 2017, and the final report's calls for justice.

Those initiatives include: legislation to preserve Indigenous languages, legislation to give Indigenous communities control over their own child-welfare systems and the elimination of gender discrimination in the Indian Act.

"We recognize there is much more work to do and are committed to taking concrete actions that will help keep Indigenous women, girls, LGBTQ and two-spirit people safe and address the disempowering effects of colonization," the ministers say in their joint statement.

"We will continue our work with First Nations, Inuit and Metis people, and with provincial, territorial and municipal partners to respond to the calls for justice by putting in place a national action plan that is distinctions-based, regionally relevant, accountable and one in which outcomes are measured and the plan regularly adapted to ensure progress."

MORE National ARTICLES

Remember us after pandemic: minimum-wage grocery store worker worried about

Remember us after pandemic: minimum-wage grocery store worker worried about
DELTA, B.C. — Worrying about being infected with COVID-19 at the grocery store where she works has become part of the job for Kelly Ferguson, who lives with her 90-year-old mother.

Remember us after pandemic: minimum-wage grocery store worker worried about

Nova Scotia mass killing investigation monumental logistical task: ex-Mountie

Nova Scotia mass killing investigation monumental logistical task: ex-Mountie
A retired high-ranking Mountie says the investigation into one of Canada's worst mass killings will tax the resources of the Nova Scotia RCMP. Pierre-Yves Bourduas, a former deputy commissioner, says nothing in his experience compares to what took place last weekend when 23 people were killed in a rampage by a man before he was shot dead by RCMP on Sunday.

Nova Scotia mass killing investigation monumental logistical task: ex-Mountie

COVID-19 changes Islamic month of Ramadan

COVID-19 changes Islamic month of Ramadan
This week is usually when kids in the Muslim community get excited about an annual trip to see the full moon that marks the start of Ramadan, says Cindy Jadayel, a member of the Mosque of Mercy in Ottawa. But she says it'll be one of many community events that will be cancelled during Ramadan this year.

COVID-19 changes Islamic month of Ramadan

COVID-19 latest hurdle in Canada's long road to buying new fighter jets

COVID-19 latest hurdle in Canada's long road to buying new fighter jets
COVID-19 is presenting another challenge to Canada's long-running and tumultuous effort to buy new fighter jets. The federal government last summer launched a long-awaited competition to replace the Royal Canadian Air Force's aging CF-18s with 88 new fighter jets at an estimated cost of $19 billion.

COVID-19 latest hurdle in Canada's long road to buying new fighter jets

Feds pledge $350M to help charities plug holes in funding

Feds pledge $350M to help charities plug holes in funding
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government plans to provide $350 million to Canada's charities sector. Charities have seen a severe drop in donations since the COVID-19 pandemic broke out, with donors hurting financially themselves and the charities unable to hold fundraising events.    

Feds pledge $350M to help charities plug holes in funding

Canadians trust their family doctor more than the PM on COVID-19, says poll

Canadians trust their family doctor more than the PM on COVID-19, says poll
Canadians trust health professionals like their family doctor first and foremost when it comes to the COVID-19 crisis, a new poll suggests. The poll, conducted by Leger and the Association for Canadian Studies, asked respondents to rate their level of trust in various institutions, including public health officials and politicians.

Canadians trust their family doctor more than the PM on COVID-19, says poll