The Province

MMIW inquiry chair critical of government’s lack of action

- HOLLY MCKENZIE-SUTTER

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — The chief commission­er of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls says she hasn’t seen much progress from the federal government since the inquiry’s critical interim report was published last year.

“It’s the action that counts, not the thought. The action so far is not speaking too loudly,” chief commission­er Marion Buller said Thursday.

The final witnesses testified in St. John’s, N.L., on Thursday, with calls for authoritie­s to include sexual exploitati­on survivors in policing and protection of the victims of human traffickin­g.

The inquiry had requested a two-year extension, but the federal government allotted just six months. Buller said Thursday the short extension is not enough time.

Extra time would have allowed for more in-depth investigat­ion into the child welfare system, and for visits to institutio­ns, penitentia­ries and prisons to speak with incarcerat­ed Indigenous women, she said.

“Do we have enough time? No. But we’ll make do,” said Buller. “I know families and survivors all across Canada are relying on us to do our very best and then some.”

She said the government probably considered what was recommende­d in the first report, but she hasn’t seen “any specific action.”

Buller praised the strength and honesty of families and survivors who testified.

Parties with standing will give their final submission­s at public events in Calgary and Ottawa later this year, before commission­ers write their final report.

The report and its recommenda­tions are set to be submitted to the federal government next April.

The inquiry got off to a rough start in 2016 and was disrupted by a number of resignatio­ns and terminatio­ns, as well as calls to restart the process altogether and for Buller to resign.

Families and witnesses grew frustrated in early 2017 without a clear timeline as to when they could testify.

Last November’s interim report said bureaucrat­ic red tape hampered inquiry staff.

Buller pointed to “individual

success stories” that have come out of the process, saying she’s heard from people who have been motivated to go back to school, report abusers and get their children back from care.

The week’s expert hearings

were to focus on sexual exploitati­on, sexual abuse and human traffickin­g.

In St. John’s on Thursday, the inquiry heard from Rachel Willan, a violence and traffickin­g survivor, Diane Redsky, a Manitoba community

outreach leader, and Chief Danny Smyth and Staff Sgt. Darryl Ramkissoon of Winnipeg police.

They looked at linkages between the child welfare system, sexual exploitati­on and the justice system.

Redsky, who has worked with sexual exploitati­on and traffickin­g victims for more than two decades, said 13-year-old girls are the most common targets. She said the internet is only making the exploitati­on more insidious.

“It is a growing problem that is almost out of control,” Redsky said.

Redsky recommende­d authoritie­s make use of existing laws against human traffickin­g, and recommende­d that victims of sexual exploitati­on have their criminal records expunged.

Willan, who works with sexual exploitati­on survivors, said she was raised in 53 placements as a child and spent decades of her life being trafficked, assaulted and abused. She spent significan­t time incarcerat­ed and built up a criminal record on charges from instances when she fought back against perpetrato­rs.

“It was women holding the door shut that protected me and my other survivor sisters that said, ‘You’re not going to hurt her,’ ” Willan said.

“It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to know what it takes to surround a woman with love and have her exit on her own.”

 ?? — CP ?? Chief commission­er Marion Buller listens to witness testimony at the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women on Thursday in St. John’s, N.L.
— CP Chief commission­er Marion Buller listens to witness testimony at the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women on Thursday in St. John’s, N.L.

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