Lethbridge Herald

Commission releases interim report into unmarked graves at residentia­l schools

- Kelly Geraldine Malone

An interim report from an internatio­nal group hired to provide advice on identifyin­g and locating the unmarked graves of children who attended residentia­l schools says Canada should continue funding searches beyond 2025.

The report from the Internatio­nal Commission on Missing Persons, based in The Hague, covers the work done so far and suggests next steps.

It also recommends there should be a multijuris­dictional dialogue to support the needs of communitie­s and for Ottawa to ratify the United Nations Internatio­nal Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappeara­nce.

“States have the responsibi­lity to find all missing persons, regardless of their background,” Kathryne Bomberger, directorge­neral of the commission, said Thursday in Ottawa.

Ottawa launched the Residentia­l Schools Missing Children Community Support

Fund in June 2021. The money is for communitie­s and families to research, locate and document burial sites, as well as to memorializ­e the deaths of children and return remains home.

The initiative is funded until 2025. Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada said it was unable to provide a comment Thursday.

A national movement to find and commemorat­e unmarked graves began after ground-penetratin­g radar detected possible remains at the former Kamloops Residentia­l School in British Columbia in 2021. Many other First Nations began to search the grounds of former residentia­l schools across the country and thousands more possible graves have since been located.

Soon after the initial discovery, the Assembly of First Nations invited the commission to Canada to help provide advice and technical support. Indigenous leaders called for the developmen­t of a national legal framework to address the identifica­tion of unmarked graves in the context of internatio­nal criminal law and human rights abuses.

The commission specialize­s in working with government­s and organizati­ons around the world to find people who have disappeare­d. It conducted such work in Canada after the 2013 Lac-Mégantic rail disaster that left 47 people dead.

The federal government signed a technical agreement with the commission last year. But shortly after the $2-million contract was announced, it was criticized by the National Centre for Truth and Reconcilia­tion and a special interlocut­or the government appointed to probe the issue because of the commission’s lack of Indigenous background.

An amended agreement was later signed. The commission’s report says it conducted eight formal presentati­ons with First Nations, participat­ed in 10 key gatherings and held one-on-one discussion­s, connecting with about 1,500 Indigenous rights holders and partners.

It also monitored a search at a former residentia­l school site in Manitoba.

Some First Nations requested assistance in “forensic archeology and anthropolo­gy, requiremen­ts for undertakin­g an exhumation, and efficient data management in cases of long-term missing persons,” the report says.

Bomberger said the search process for each community is unique but there needs to be a unified strategy to collect and share data. The report says it’s important to support Indigenous-led investigat­ions with technical assistance from the commission.

“It’s a very tough and grueling process to start to think about and find ways we can support without retraumati­zing families,” said Sheila North, Canada program manager for the commission.

An estimated 150,000 Indigenous children were forced to attend residentia­l schools across Canada. The Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, which looked into the legacy of the schools, found a high rate of death from violence, illness and malnutriti­on.

North said communitie­s need answers, and that requires ongoing financial support.

The report’s release coincided with a news conference held by Niki Ashton, federal NDP critic for Indigenous Services, with representa­tives of the commission and some First Nations leaders. Ashton called on the Liberal government to continue funding as long as communitie­s are searching for answers.

“Canada’s response has been less than acceptable,” Ashton said.

Dene National Chief Gerald Antoine said he’s developed a good relationsh­ip with the commission. He said residentia­l schools amounted to genocide and a crime. Families deserve justice, he said.

“The truth is being revealed,” Antoine said. “There are many people who are missing.”

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A child’s dress is seen on a cross outside a former residentia­l school in Kamloops, B.C. in 2021. An interim report from an internatio­nal group hired to provide advice on identifyin­g and locating the unmarked graves says Canada should continue funding searches beyond 2025.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO A child’s dress is seen on a cross outside a former residentia­l school in Kamloops, B.C. in 2021. An interim report from an internatio­nal group hired to provide advice on identifyin­g and locating the unmarked graves says Canada should continue funding searches beyond 2025.

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