Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Will Canada face criminal charges for residentia­l school abuses?

Lawyers call for police to lay criminal charges against Canadian government, churches and people who worked at institutio­ns.

- By Hilary Beaumont

Toronto, Canada – Like many Indigenous people across Canada, Andrew Phypers, a criminal defence lawyer from the Lower Kootenay Band in the Canadian province of British Columbia, has a personal connection to “residentia­l schools”.

“I have lots of people in my community that attended the residentia­l schools and can personally attest to the atrocities that did occur there,” Phypers told Al Jazeera in a recent phone interview. The unmarked graves at St Eugene’s were among several recent discoverie­s of hundreds of Indigenous children’s graves at the government-founded and churchrun assimilati­on institutio­ns.

From the late 1800s until 1996, Canada removed 150,000 Indigenous children from their homes and forced them into institutio­ns run by church staff where they had to cut their long hair and were forbidden from speaking their language and practising their culture. Many were physically and sexually abused. Thousands of children are believed to have died.

Canada’s goal was to kill Indigenous culture to make land and resources available to settlers. The Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission (TRC), a years-long process documentin­g survivors’ stories, concluded the practice was cultural genocide.

In 2016, the Canadian government identified more than 5,000 abusers, but to date, no individual­s or institutio­ns have faced charges under the Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes Act, a federal law passed in 2000. A small number of priests were charged with sexual assault, but none have faced charges for homicide, according to lawyers familiar with the matter.

The recent discoverie­s of unmarked graves have spurred Indigenous groups and lawyers to demand that police lay criminal charges against the Canadian government, churches and individual perpetrato­rs of crimes committed in the institutio­ns.

The Nat i ve Women’ s Associatio­n of Canada (NWAC) is behind a push for criminal charges, while Phypers is working with a group of lawyers to encourage the Internatio­nal Criminal Court ( ICC) to open an investigat­ion into the institutio­ns. But experts say their efforts could be stalled or thwarted by the Canadian government.

“Part of our ambition is to see accountabi­lity,” Phypers said.

How would it work?

The ICC, the world’s first permanent internatio­nal criminal court, investigat­es and, when warranted, tries individual­s for the most serious crimes, including genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Phypers is working with Brendan Miller, a lawyer with a background in internatio­nal law who said individual abusers, the Canadian government and the Catholic Church could all face charges related to residentia­l schools under the Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes Act.

Under the Act, Canada is one of the only countries in the world to give the ICC prosecutor domestic powers. That means if the ICC opens an investigat­ion into residentia­l schools, it can demand documents and undertake an investigat­ion, and it would be an offence for the Canadian government to interfere with that process. The ICC can also request that police in Canada help it investigat­e war crimes.

“If the ICC prosecutor opens up a file, you’ve got a pure, independen­t investigat­ion,” Miller said.

On June 3, Miller asked the ICC to open a preliminar­y examinatio­n into Canada’s residentia­l schools. If the court decides to prosecute, there would be a trial. The ICC prosecutor did not respond to Al Jazeera’s request for comment on whether it would open an investigat­ion.

But the ICC is a court of last resort – it does not replace national courts unless a country neglects to initiate an impartial investigat­ion, Miller explained. Canada has yet to do this.

“They’ve known about all these things for decades, and they haven’t done anything,” he said, about the crimes committed at the residentia­l schools, which have been widely documented. “Canada is supposed to be this bastion of human rights, and it’s an absolute embarrassm­ent that we can’t even do an impartial investigat­ion of this, which is quite clearly a crime against humanity.”

Barriers to justice

Other than an ICC prosecutio­n, there are other paths to criminal charges.

Any peace officer in Canada can initiate charges, such as murder or sexual assault, under the Criminal Code, the law that lays out criminal offences in Canada. But if an officer wanted to charge an individual or institutio­n with a crime under the Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes Act – genocide, for example – they would need the consent of Canada’s attorney general.

This is where it gets complicate­d, as this requiremen­t, in practice, means the government itself would be in a position to block the charge. In Canada’s government, the attorney general litigates on behalf of the Crown and is the top legal adviser to the Canadian government.

“As far as I know, the police have laid no charges, so there’s no consent required yet,” explained NWAC general counsel Steven Pink, who questioned why police have taken so long to pursue justice. “It’s our position there’s overwhelmi­ng evidence of a genocide in Canada,” he said, pointing to the 7,000 residentia­l school survivors who testified before the TRC.

Phypers, Miller and the NWAC all have called on Attorney General David Lametti, who is also Canada’s minister of justice, to consent to charges, if and when they are brought. Lametti has not yet committed to this.

“The minister of justice is examining all options that fall within the justice portfolio to advance truth and justice in relation to this national tragedy,” Chantalle Aubertin, press secretary for Lametti, told Al Jazeera. “It’s important to note that the investigat­ion of crimes is within the exclusive jurisdicti­on of the police. The minister of justice and attorney general of Canada does not initiate criminal investigat­ions.”

However, Miller said that if the minister “was really serious about exploring all options – and I can tell you we have asked for this in writing – they would pass a piece of legislatio­n creating an independen­t body of police to investigat­e this and allow them to do it”.

“So for him to say that he’s looking at all options and he can’t compel an investigat­ion and all of that, that’s garbage,” said Miller, who added Lametti can request municipal police to create an independen­t investigat­ion. “They just don’t want to,” he said.

Al Jazeera asked Lametti’s office whether he will take these steps, but did not receive a response in time for publicatio­n.

‘People are very angry’

The NWAC has called on Canada’s federal police force, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police ( RCMP) to declare residentia­l school sites crime scenes and investigat­e the people responsibl­e for crimes committed there.

But Phypers questioned whether the RCMP could run an impartial investigat­ion since it was the authority that enforced laws related to residentia­l schools and took Indigenous children from their parents. Al Jazeera asked the RCMP if they would investigat­e, but they did not answer the question. Across Canada, police forces are investigat­ing recent vandalism and burnings of churches as hate crimes, but it is not clear yet if police are investigat­ing crimes in residentia­l schools.

“It’s clear to me that people are very angry about these discoverie­s and clearly hold the church to blame, and that’s why these churches are being symbolical­ly and actually burned,” Phypers said.

If the graves were found on private property instead of residentia­l school sites, he said police likely would have opened an investigat­ion already. “They would have said, where did these bodies come from, and who is responsibl­e for putting them there? When it’s now tied to a church and the government, you don’t have that same reaction.”

But Phypers said he hopes public pressure will push police to open impartial investigat­ions that will result in prosecutio­ns and criminal trials across the country. “I would hope on the heels of all these discoverie­s of mass graves, that would motivate them to move quickly, especially as that number keeps rising.”

 ?? REUTERS/Shannon VanRaes ?? Shoes sit on the steps of the provincial legislatur­e, placed there following the discovery of the remains of hundreds of children at former indigenous residentia­l schools, on Canada Day in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada July 1, 2021.
REUTERS/Shannon VanRaes Shoes sit on the steps of the provincial legislatur­e, placed there following the discovery of the remains of hundreds of children at former indigenous residentia­l schools, on Canada Day in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada July 1, 2021.

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