The Hamilton Spectator

National inquiry urged to hear voices of Indigenous women in prison

- KRISTY KIRKUP

OTTAWA — A former sex worker who spent time in jail is urging the national inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls to interview other Aboriginal women who are languishin­g behind bars to hear their insights.

Sharon Acoose was a victim of childhood abuse — and she believes the majority of Indigenous women who end up in provincial jails or federal prisons have also endured emotional, physical and sexual violence, and can offer a perspectiv­e vital to the work of the inquiry.

“They need to hear the stories,” Acoose said. “They need to hear the heartbreak.”

Acoose suffered her own heartbreak as a victim of childhood molestatio­n: beginning at age 3, she was abused by three now-dead uncles — an experience she said set in motion the circumstan­ces that led to her involvemen­t in sex work, drugs, alcohol and crime.

Many Indigenous women who are at risk share similar pain, she said. “Of course they’ve been abused. They don’t just end up on the street for nothing.”

About 91 per cent of Indigenous women in penitentia­ries are abuse victims — a “staggering” percentage, said Sen. Kim Pate, the former executive director of the Canadian Associatio­n of Elizabeth Fry Societies.

Many of the issues that lead to a life on the streets or behind bars are the same as those that lead to missing or murdered women, Pate added.

“Because of the histories of abuse and poverty, their experience­s of marginaliz­ation, many of them have also been medicated — if not medicated by the medical profession­al, they may have started to medicate themselves,” she said.

“All of those put them at increased risk of being further victimized … they’re also likely to face further criminaliz­ation.”

As of March 2015, the Office of the Correction­al Investigat­or reported Aboriginal inmates represente­d 24 per cent of the federal custody population.

During a Senate committee hearing last month, Marion Buller, the inquiry’s chief commission­er, was asked by Pate how the inquiry could reach out to marginaliz­ed Indigenous women, including those involved in sex work or in prison.

A statement-taker could meet with the women in safe locations to collect their testimony, Buller suggested.

“The most marginaliz­ed Indigenous women and girls in Canada are of great concern to us,” Buller said. “We’ve heard already from people who are in the sex trade; people who are in prisons who have written to us.”

The inquiry has yet to respond to further requests for comment on how the commission is reaching out to penitentia­ries — something Pate said she’s anxious to hear about.

An interim progress report is set to be released next month.

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Sharon Acoose is an Indigenous woman who spent time as a sex worker and in jail. Acoose is a victim of childhood abuse.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Sharon Acoose is an Indigenous woman who spent time as a sex worker and in jail. Acoose is a victim of childhood abuse.

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