Windsor Star

‘WE THINK THAT IT WOULD BE IN THE BEST INTERESTS OF THE INDIGENOUS WOMEN OF CANADA THAT THE CURRENT COMMISSION­ERS BE BRAVE AND ... STEP DOWN’ — CO-CHAIR OF A MANITOBA COALITION OF MMIW FAMILIES.

Call for commission­ers to step down

- STEVE LAMBERT AND KRISTY KIRKUP

WINNIPEG • Cries from frustrated families of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls grew louder Wednesday as advocates in different parts of the country called for a reboot of the study following the resignatio­n of a Métis commission­er.

Bridget Tolley, who has spent 16 years searching for answers in the death of her mother, Gladys, said she was about to meet with members of the inquiry at a Toronto hotel when she learned that Marilyn Poitras — one of five commission­ers named last summer by the Liberal government — had resigned from her position.

The focus of the meeting was an open letter released by a coalition of advocates in May who argued the commission needed to shift its approach and suggested it was in “serious trouble.”

Yet, there was no mention of Poitras’ departure, Tolley said in an interview Wednesday.

“We waited for them to bring it up but they didn’t,” she said. “We all knew about it, too.”

Tolley and a number of others want a major overhaul of the two-year $53.8-million study designed to examine the root causes of violence against Indigenous women and girls.

Beverley Jacobs, a former president of the Native Women’s Associatio­n of Canada, said she was supportive of the inquiry in the beginning but doesn’t have it in her to back something that may cause harm to families.

“Why can’t the rest of the commission­ers accept that this isn’t working and that they really need to take a look at themselves and understand that there’s no trust and if there is, there’s very, very little from very few families,” she asked.

In Winnipeg, advocates called for the remaining four commission­ers to step down.

“We think that it would be in the best interests of the Indigenous women of Canada that the current commission­ers be brave and ... step down,” said Sandra Delaronde, co-chair of a coalition of Manitoba relatives of missing and murdered women.

“The national inquiry, in its current form, is not hearing the voices, is not inviting the consultati­on ... of the families and those that work on a daily basis with families.”

Delaronde said families don’t want the inquiry scrapped, but changes are required, including new commission­ers who are related to victims or who have worked closely with victims’ families.

Betty Rourke, whose sister and daughter were killed in separate incidents decades apart, said she watched footage of the inquiry’s hearing in Whitehorse and was shocked.

“It’s almost like you’re on trial there,” she said. “We don’t want to have to be sworn in, you know? Because we’re going to tell the truth. What, don’t you believe me? That hurts.”

The coalition also said it wants a separate commission­er for Manitoba.

Lead commission­er Marion Buller said Tuesday it will be up to the federal government to decide if a replacemen­t for Poitras will be named, adding the commission remains focused on its “tremendous­ly important work.”

Métis National Council president Clement Chartier, who said his mother was “viciously violated” and beaten to death in 1961, wants a quick decision on whether another commission­er is required.

The council would like to see a Métis person appointed, and consultati­ons would be necessary, Chartier said.

He said he does not want to see resignatio­ns from the remaining commission­ers.

“If they do resign, it is just going to put everything back,” he said. “It is not a very good signal.”

The commission says it is moving ahead with its work, including nine hearings this fall beginning in September in Thunder Bay, Ont.

 ?? JEAN LEVAC / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Bridget Tolley holds a picture of murder victim Kelly Morrisseau. Tolley and a number of others want a major overhaul of the two-year $53.8-million study designed to examine the root causes of violence against Indigenous women.
JEAN LEVAC / POSTMEDIA NEWS Bridget Tolley holds a picture of murder victim Kelly Morrisseau. Tolley and a number of others want a major overhaul of the two-year $53.8-million study designed to examine the root causes of violence against Indigenous women.

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