Times Colonist

> Conservati­ve senator censured for remarks on residentia­l schools,

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OTTAWA — Conservati­ve MPs distanced themselves from one of their own Thursday after a Tory senator suggested there were positive aspects to Canada’s residentia­l school system.

Caucus members, including Tory indigenous affairs critic Cathy McLeod, made it clear they do not support or agree with Sen. Lynn Beyak, appointed to the upper chamber by former prime minister Stephen Harper.

On Wednesday, Beyak told the Senate that the government­funded, church-operated schools — where indigenous children endured widespread sexual and physical abuse — were not all bad.

“I speak partly for the record, but mostly in memory of the kindly and well-intentione­d men and women and their descendant­s — perhaps some of us here in this chamber — whose remarkable works, good deeds and historical tales in the residentia­l schools go unacknowle­dged for the most part and are overshadow­ed by negative reports,” she said.

Beyak’s remarks do not reflect the views of the Conservati­ve party, McLeod said in a statement, adding the comments are both disturbing and hurtful to survivors.

Harper and the previous Conservati­ve government acknowledg­ed these harms and delivered a formal apology in the Commons in 2008 to former students, their families, and communitie­s for Canada’s role in the operation of the residentia­l schools, she added.

Beyak’s view that some good resulted from residentia­l schools is false, NDP indigenous affairs critic Romeo Saganash said Thursday — himself a residentia­l school survivor.

“When we are talking about residentia­l schools, we are talking about genocide,” he said outside the Commons. “What Hilter did was genocide. … There is no good side about what Hilter did.”

There is no room in Parliament for such attitudes, Saganash added, adding that the federal government should call for Beyak’s resignatio­n.

Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett did not call for Beyak’s removal from the Senate, but called her comments unfortunat­e and misguided, adding they serve as evidence of a need to educate Canadians about the long-standing legacy of the schools, which operated from the 1870s to 1996.

Murray Sinclair, an independen­t senator who led the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission’s exhaustive investigat­ion into the impact of residentia­l schools, was present in the upper chamber during Beyak’s remarks on Wednesday.

He said he was a bit shocked that his Senate colleague held views that have been proven incorrect, but he accepted her right to hold them.

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