Regina Leader-Post

FSIN calls for Royal Commission into justice system after recent verdicts

- BETTY ANN ADAM badam@postmedia.com

We’ve had inquiries, we’ve had Royal Commission­s doing studies, but we’ve been studied to death.

Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations Vice-Chief David Pratt and Chief Bobby Cameron said Friday in Saskatoon that the not guilty verdicts in the deaths of Colten Boushie and Tina Fontaine raise questions.

First Nations leaders in Saskatchew­an say a Royal Commission is “urgently needed” to examine the inequaliti­es Indigenous people face in the justice system.

Chief Bobby Cameron of the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations (FSIN) told reporters Friday in Saskatoon that the not guilty verdicts in the trial of Gerald Stanley in Battleford and Raymond Cormier in Winnipeg — each of whom was accused of murdering young Indigenous people — raise serious questions about the roles of the police, justice and child welfare systems.

The focus of a Royal Commission needs to be on decisions that were made within those systems in the handling of the deaths of Colten Boushie, 22, and Tina Fontaine, 15, and the non-Indigenous men accused of killing them — not on the Indigenous people, as if the problems laid with them, Cameron said.

“We’ve had inquiries, we’ve had Royal Commission­s doing studies, but we’ve been studied to death,” he said.

A Royal Commission needs to look at the RCMP and the justice system, including peremptory challenges in jury selection, and needs to explore issues as diverse as policing, prosecutio­ns, education, health care, mental-health care and employment, vice-chief David Pratt said.

Pratt also pointed to the sentencing Friday of the La Loche teenager who shot and killed four people there two years ago, saying it “underscore­s the need for more mental-health investment in the north.”

Having a mental-health worker visit a northern community one day per week is not enough, he said. “They need those investment­s.” Pratt said the Stanley verdict was “a catalyst” to communicat­ion with Premier Scott Moe and several cabinet ministers.

“We feel like there wasn’t much of a relationsh­ip under the previous leadership of Premier Wall in terms of engagement or working together or trying to advance the issues .... Now with Premier Moe and the new government, the cabinet ministers, there’s some good dialogue happening and I think we can find some ways forward,” Pratt said.

“We now have their personal phone numbers. We didn’t have that before. I was still waiting for (a meeting with a) minister for 110 days, but now we’re having those meetings.”

 ?? KAYLE NEIS ??
KAYLE NEIS

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