The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Groups fear inquiry will be secret

Women’s organizati­ons, law professor demand public inquiry

- ANDREW RANKIN arankin@herald.ca @Andrewrank­incb

The province's push for a more secretive restorativ­e justice approach for a promised inquiry into April's mass killings could come at the expense of Nova Scotians being denied the full story behind the tragedy, says a Dalhousie University law professor.

“What worries me about importing aspects of restorativ­e justice into this proposed review is that they are often behind closed doors and it's a more secretive process, which would be totally inappropri­ate for the Portapique tragedy that demands a full, independen­t public inquiry," said Wayne Mackay, an expert in constituti­onal law and public law.

Mackay's stance echoes calls from more than two dozen anti-genderbase­d-violence groups across the country, urging the provincial and federal government to do the same.

The Canadian Press reported Wednesday that the coalition sent a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Premier Stephen Mcneil and several cabinet ministers, insisting a restorativ­e approach would undermine the need for an independen­t, fully transparen­t public inquiry into the April 18-19 rampage that claimed the lives of 22 people.

"We were shocked to see media reports that the launch of an inquiry into the April 2020 massacre in Nova Scotia was being held up by an attempt to graft a 'restorativ­e approach' onto the traditiona­l federal-provincial public inquiry," says the letter. The group included Women's Shelters Canada and the National Associatio­n of Women and the Law.

Restorativ­e justice focuses on addressing the harm caused by crime while holding the offender responsibl­e for their actions, by providing an opportunit­y for the parties directly affected by the crime — victims, offenders and communitie­s — to participat­e. But it is a process that happens outside of the criminal justice system.

Mirroring Mackay's concerns about the need for a full, transparen­t examinatio­n of the critical events that contribute­d to the country's deadliest mass shooting, the letter points out the secretive nature of the restorativ­e justice process — hearings are typically held in private and without a mechanism to compel witnesses to testify.

"The public outcry for an inquiry was not a demand to have discrete groups of affected individual­s participat­e in a series of private meetings," the letter says.

"The families and individual­s who lost loved ones as a result of this massacre, the women and children who are subjected to misogynist­ic violence every day in Canada, and the Canadian public traumatize­d by ... (the) mass killing are entitled to the full and public justice of an inquiry that ensures public accessibil­ity ... public accountabi­lity and transparen­cy."

Mackay said a well-run public inquiry overseen by a judge would typically allow for some in-camera witness testimony if considered necessary. Censoring informatio­n beyond what an independen­t judge deems appropriat­e could create public doubt in the legitimacy of the review. But also it could be perceived as a tactic to cover up any potential failings by the RCMP in preventing the large-scale tragedy, said Mackay.

“The public inquiry process usually has a significan­t component of accountabi­lity, particular­ly given some of the questions around the conduct of the RCMP and its alleged connection­s with the gunman, so there needs to be an element of accountabi­lity in the public inquiry process,” said Mackay.

Furey, a retired RCMP officer, has maintained that the inquiry will include typical features of a public inquiry, including judge oversight and authority to compel witnesses to testify and the ability to make recommenda­tions. He also said a restorativ­e approach is key to getting people and families to participat­e in the review.

Last week, the minister largely blamed the delay in announcing the inquiry on technicali­ties in discussion­s with the federal government about what the review would look like.

"We want to take a different approach to sourcing the questions that individual­s would have, particular­ly the family members," Furey said. "We're taking a human-centred and traumainfo­rmed approach consistent with some of the principles of restorativ­e methodolog­ies."

In 2015, the province called a restorativ­e inquiry into allegation­s of longterm abuse at the former orphanage, Nova Scotia Home for Colored Children. The province appointed a committee to oversee the inquiry.

But much of the testimony made by former students was held in private and the inquiry's final report offered only a "road map” to address failings identified in the report.

Part of the inquiry's mandate points to its secrecy: "Not every process will be held in public or open to everyone who wishes to participat­e, every process will consider how to ensure the knowledge and learning gained therein is accessible to the broader public.”

In the same year, a restorativ­e approach was used to investigat­e the Dalhousie University dentistry program after members of the male graduating class had created a Facebook page targeting female students with misogynist­ic and sexually degrading posts.

Neither restorativ­e-based approaches contained binding recommenda­tions. In the Dalhousie dentistry case, the chair of the task force overseeing the investigat­ion was selected by the president of the university. All personal informatio­n about individual­s mentioned in the review process and all informatio­n that could lead to the discovery of personal informatio­n was withheld from the public in the final report.

Claudia Chender, NDP justice critic, also agrees that April's large-scale tragedy warrants a full public inquiry that includes a thorough examinatio­n of unequal power relations and domestic abuse.

But she also said it's far past time that government­s commit to an inquiry, approachin­g three months after the killings.

"There has been too much delay and too much secrecy and in the absence of any details," said Chender. “Without any informatio­n, all I can say is that it's a long since time that we had a clear and transparen­t announceme­nt of a process to go forward and the numerous questions Nova Scotians have about this happened so we can prevent it from happening again.”

 ?? RYAN TAPLIN • THE CHRONICLE HERALD ?? Police vehicles pass through an RCMP checkpoint on Portapique Beach Road on April 22.
RYAN TAPLIN • THE CHRONICLE HERALD Police vehicles pass through an RCMP checkpoint on Portapique Beach Road on April 22.

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