Times Colonist

Missing-women lawyer quits, cites interferen­ce

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VANCOUVER — A lawyer for the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls announced his resignatio­n Monday, and in a statement cites government interferen­ce among his reasons.

Breen Ouellette, who worked as a commission counsel for the inquiry at its Vancouver offices, posted online that he resigned on June 21.

Breen, who is Métis, says in the statement that he believes the federal government has “undermined the independen­ce and impartiali­ty of the national inquiry” and that he cannot remain part of a process that he says “is speeding towards failure.”

He also asks the inquiry’s commission­ers to allow him to fully disclose the reasons behind his resignatio­n, which he says he cannot do as a lawyer.

The inquiry has been plagued by chronic delays, staff turnover and complaints from families about disorganiz­ation, poor communicat­ion and a lack of transparen­cy.

Nadine Gros-Louis, a spokeswoma­n for the inquiry, confirmed in an email that Ouellette has stepped down, noting that staffing changes do occur.

“As you can appreciate, and as with all organizati­ons, staffing does not remain constant, especially in an environmen­t dealing with difficult subject matter where many staff work extended hours,” Gros-Louis wrote.

Breen’s statement doesn’t mention long hours. As an example of government interferen­ce, though, he said the inquiry needs to be able to properly investigat­e allegation­s of “illegal and improper” foster-care apprehensi­ons.

“The national inquiry could use its powers to force government department­s to comply with investigat­ions into these allegation­s. The perpetrato­rs could be identified so that government­s could stop the misuse of billions of Canadian tax dollars by a few heartless bureaucrat­s seeking to advance their careers,” Breen wrote.

“However, interferen­ce by the federal government is underminin­g this important function of the national inquiry. Canadians deserve to know which provinces and territorie­s perpetuate this unnecessar­y and harmful spending of billions of tax dollars on foster-care apprehensi­ons.”

Last month, the government turned down a request by inquiry officials for a two-year extension in order to give commission­ers until Dec. 31, 2020, to make recommenda­tions and produce findings.

Instead, the government agreed to only extend the inquiry’s deadline by another six months. That gives commission­ers until next April 30 to finish its hearings and submit a final report, instead of the initial deadline of Nov. 1 of this year.

Reached late Monday, Breen said the refusal to grant the two-year-extension, along with the funding for it, shows the government isn’t serious about the commission­ers meeting the inquiry’s mandate. “They’re trying to kill the national inquiry in a death by a thousand cuts, and they’re trying to pin the failure on the commission­ers,” Breen said in an interview.

Carolyn Bennett, minister of CrownIndig­enous relations, said provinces and territorie­s were not unanimousl­y supportive of extending the terms of reference for the inquiry into next year.

Gros-Louis, meanwhile, said the inquiry remains independen­t.

“With diverse background­s, experience and expertise, we are united by a deep commitment to honour the missing and murdered, uncover the truth and build a better future for Indigenous women and girls,” she wrote.

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