Times Colonist

Advisers on unmarked graves won’t work with internatio­nal organizati­on feds hired

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

A panel of Indigenous experts says it will not participat­e in an engagement campaign hosted by an internatio­nal organizati­on Ottawa hired to provide advice on identifyin­g possible human remains in unmarked graves.

The National Advisory Committee on Residentia­l Schools Missing Children and Unmarked Burials released a statement Monday saying that after giving the matter careful thought, it has decided against involvemen­t in the process.

“While the [committee] is appreciati­ve of a number of changes that have since been made to this agreement, we remain deeply concerned that such an important and sensitive process has been entrusted to a non-Indigenous organizati­on with no prior history of working with residentia­l school survivors,” the statement said.

The federal government and the National Centre for Truth and Reconcilia­tion — which serves as an archive for records from the former residentia­l school system — announced the formation of the committee last July. It comprises elders as well as experts in forensics, ground-penetratin­g

Secw‡ᬯpemc radar and archival records.

Months earlier, the Tk’emlúps te Nation in British Columbia released groundpene­trating radar findings of what are believed to be more than 200 unmarked graves at the site of a former residentia­l school, sparking widespread outcry.

Other First Nations across Western Canada have since announced similar discoverie­s, and last fall the federal government signed a contract with the Netherland­s-based Internatio­nal Commission on Missing Persons to engage with communitie­s on identifyin­g possible remains.

The national advisory committee raised concerns about the agreement around the time it was announced, as did an outside official whom the federal government has appointed to serve as an independen­t interlocut­or tasked with developing policy around how to better protect lands that are home to unmarked graves.

Issues have arisen about Ottawa tapping a non-Indigenous organizati­on to speak to communitie­s about options when it already has Indigenous experts and residentia­l school survivors doing similar work.

The advisory committee says in its statement that it supports Indigenous families and communitie­s seeking technical support from whichever organizati­on they choose.

“However [the committee] feels strongly that a federal engagement process aimed at developing a common national strategy on DNA, identifica­tion, and repatriati­on for residentia­l schools missing children must do more than simply employ Indigenous staff,” it read.

“It must be Indigenous-led and survivor-led to ensure that no further harm is done.”

The director-general of the missing persons commission told the Canadian Press in February she wants its work to be given a chance. Kathryne Bomberger said in an interview the body was first contacted by members of a Cree community as well as northern Manitoba NDP MP Niki Ashton, leading it to eventually submit a proposal to the federal government.

The organizati­on previously worked in Canada to help identify the remains of those killed during the Lac-Megantic rail disaster in Quebec in 2013. Through its $2-million contract with Ottawa, Bomberger has said, the commission would provide Indigenous communitie­s with possible options to identify remains believed to be in unmarked graves and report to Ottawa on what it has heard.

 ?? CP FILE ?? Members of the Six Nations Police conduct a search for unmarked graves using ground-penetratin­g radar on 500 acres of land associated with the former Mohawk Institute Residentia­l School, in Brantford, Ont., on Nov. 9, 2021.
CP FILE Members of the Six Nations Police conduct a search for unmarked graves using ground-penetratin­g radar on 500 acres of land associated with the former Mohawk Institute Residentia­l School, in Brantford, Ont., on Nov. 9, 2021.

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