Times Colonist

‘Policing through stereotype­s’ denounced by Inuit leader

- TERESA WRIGHT

OTTAWA — Canada’s national police force has a shattered relationsh­ip with Indigenous Peoples and must re-examine how it treats individual­s, especially those who are homeless or dealing with addiction issues, the head of a national Inuit organizati­on said Thursday.

“I think what we’re seeing is policing through stereotype­s,” Natan Obed, the president of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, told MPs on the public safety committee.

“Without a relationsh­ip between the RCMP and the community, Inuit aren’t seen as people but we’re seen through all the negative lenses that perhaps the general Canadian society thinks of when they think of Inuit and what it’s like to police Inuit.”

This leads to over-policing and under-policing: excessive use of force in some cases, while Indigenous women are murdered or going missing with little to no police follow-up, he added.

The committee is probing the issue of systemic racism in policing in Canada, following a number of serious and violent incidents between the RCMP and Indigenous Peoples this year, including several in Nunavut.

“What we know paints a distressin­g picture of the systemic nature of police violence and discrimina­tion against our communitie­s,” Obed said.

“What is clear is that systemic racism and racism itself kills,” he said, calling for action.

Virtually all of the witnesses, including First Nations and Inuit leaders, as well as a number of social policy experts, urged Ottawa to launch an independen­t, civilian review of RCMP practices as a first step in addressing the problem.

Regional Chief Terry Teegee of the British Columbia Assembly of First Nations said there is an urgent need for less punitive and more restorativ­e options for policing.

He called zero-tolerance policies on use of force, greater use of body cameras and for the federal government to create a national strategic plan for First Nations justice.

“Really what we’re looking for is more restorativ­e justice and more looking toward rehabilita­tion and alternativ­es to jails,” Teegee said.

Given the generation­s of history of distrust between many Indigenous Peoples and the Mounties, the onus is on the force to try to rebuild this relationsh­ip, said Aluki Kotierk, president of Nunavut Tunngavik Incorporat­ed.

This should include a more trauma-informed and culturally sensitive approach and an attempt to communicat­e in their traditiona­l languages, Kotierk added.

A number of calls also emerged for more First Nations and Inuit RCMP officers and for longer deployment­s, particular­ly in northern communitie­s. But these ideas could be more challengin­g to implement, according to some of the experts, as many First Nations and Inuit might wish to travel elsewhere, rather than don the RCMP uniform in their own communitie­s.

“To ask an Indigenous person to train in a colonial form of policing to police their own communitie­s is really to ask them to adopt an internal identity struggle before they even have their first day on the job,” said Robert S. Wright, a social worker and sociologis­t who also spoke about disproport­ionate police violence against Black Canadians.

Terry McCaffrey of the Indigenous Police Chiefs of Ontario said culturally responsive policing practised by First Nations police forces has been working well, despite chronic underfundi­ng.

He urged Ottawa to follow through on its promise to designate First Nations policing as an essential service.

“The IPCO services have made the effort to ensure that our policing services align with the values of our community, instead of trying to force our communitie­s to align with convention­al policing values,” McCaffrey said.

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