The Province

Families of missing, murdered women air concerns

During hearings in Whitehorse, speakers said the national inquiry must earn their trust

- LAURA KANE

WHITEHORSE — Families of missing and murdered indigenous women told a national inquiry on its final day of hearings in Whitehorse that they have little faith in the process and their trust must be earned.

The emotional hearings ran for three days and heard from dozens of family members representi­ng 14 girls or women who have disappeare­d or been killed. Each story was unique, but the ’60s Scoop, residentia­l schools and police indifferen­ce were constant themes.

On Thursday, testimony took a more critical turn at times, with some speakers expressing wariness of the inquiry and urging the commission­ers not to let them down.

“I really don’t trust people like you guys,” said Terry Ladue, the microphone shaking in his hand.

Ladue said his mother, Jane Dick, was beaten to death after he and his siblings were seized in the ’60s Scoop, when indigenous children were taken and placed in non-indigenous homes. He said the effect was that he never learned how to love and spent 13 years “with a needle stuck up his arm.”

Ladue said he doesn’t trust the inquiry because all government has ever done is hurt him, take him away from his parents and throw his people in jail. He urged the commission­ers to do more than just talk — they must take action to elevate indigenous people in Canadian society, he said.

“Dealing with this today, for me, is letting go of something that I haven’t let go of for 52 years, and that’s the anger I have towards the government officials and the anger I have towards the RCMP.

“I don’t trust. You want my trust, you’ve got to earn my trust. If I see this fall apart, I’ll never trust again.”

Several listeners, including commission­er Qajaq Robinson, were crying by the end of Ladue’s testimony.

Chief Commission­er Marion Buller has said it’s crucial to the future of the inquiry that the Whitehorse hearings are successful. Other community meetings won’t be held until the fall, and families from across the country have been critical of delays and poor communicat­ions.

Shaun LaDue, who uses a capital “D” in his last name unlike his brother, said he felt respected and heard after testifying about their mother. He also spoke about his experience as a transgende­r man.

“The hearings so far to me seem to be going very good. The commission­ers are listening to us with their heart and their soul and they’re very responsive to what the Yukon First Nations families have to say,” he said in an interview.

Joan Jack, a lawyer and sister-inlaw of murder victim Barbara Jack, has criticized the quasi-judicial format of the inquiry. She told reporters earlier Thursday that the formal processes, including the swearing-in of witnesses, were making many participan­ts uncomforta­ble.

But as her family rose to speak Thursday afternoon, they were not asked to swear to tell the truth. Instead, they were dressed in red Tlingit regalia, which means they were “standing in their truth,” she said.

A lawyer approached her family in the morning to say that the commission­ers understood her concerns, Jack said in an interview.

“I think the commission responded to my public criticisms that using the Canadian legal system and filling it with brown people isn’t sufficient. We have to do it different,” she said.

Inquiry spokeswoma­n Bernee Bolton said that under Yukon law, there is flexibilit­y in how people are sworn in that reflects cultural diversity.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Terry Ladue speaks of the effects of his mother Jane Dick Ladue’s murder at the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Terry Ladue speaks of the effects of his mother Jane Dick Ladue’s murder at the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.

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