National Post (National Edition)
‘WHY DID I FEEL TO BLAME?’
blame?”
Squires did not identify the perpetrator, but said it was someone she had to continue to deal with on occasion.
After her teenage years, she had several careers, including journalism, before becoming a politician. She was elected as a Progressive Conservative in 2016 and now, with a seat at the provincial cabinet table, she feels she can make a difference for victims of sexual assault.
She favours third-party reporting that allows complainants to tell their stories to a community victim-services group, which deals with police without revealing identities.
British Columbia already offers that option and the Manitoba government has been looking at following suit.
“I believe that will make a strong difference in so many lives if we have a place for people to go and share their testimony … and yet not have to immediately go to a police station and fill out (a) report.”
Squires also said societal attitudes have to change.
"As victims, we know intrinsically that something bad happened to us and it’s not our fault. But then we look for cues in society — whether it be friends, social circles, judges, historic cases, the media — and … the message we hear over and over and over again is: ‘It kind of is your fault.’
“And then we internalize that trauma. And we bury it.”