Global Times

Indigenous leader presses for UN probe

Alleged genocide by Canadian government in ‘ schools’ to be investigat­ed

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“The Canadian government establishe­d what I call ‘ institutio­ns of assimilati­on and genocide.’”

An indigenous leader on Monday pressed for UN investigat­ions into alleged genocide by the Canadian government in “residentia­l schools” for indigenous children.

“The Canadian government establishe­d what I call ‘ institutio­ns of assimilati­on and genocide.’ These institutio­ns were designed to kill the Indian and the child by forbidding them to speak their language, which disconnect them from their families and communitie­s,” said RoseAnne Archibald, national chief of the Assembly of First Nations, an organizati­on for indigenous rights in Canada.

“Some people refer to these institutio­ns as ‘ residentia­l schools.’ I don’t call them schools anymore because no school I ever attended had children buried in unmarked graves. Thousands and thousands of our children died in these institutio­ns,” she told reporters at UN Headquarte­rs in New York after attending a session of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues.

“I’m calling on the UN Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, along with other special rapporteur­s, to conduct full- fledged investigat­ions of the circumstan­ces and responsibi­lities surroundin­g these institutio­ns, including full redress, criminal prosecutio­ns and sanctions and other remedies for human rights violations, including genocide.”

“Canada must not be allowed to investigat­e itself. Please help us ensure that something like this never happens again, not just to us, but to anyone.”

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police, which is the federal police organizati­on, would come into Indian communitie­s and take children forcibly and they would threaten parents with arrest. How can that organizati­on investigat­e itself or investigat­e Canada? It can’t, she said.

“Canada’s government establishe­d those institutio­ns through policies and legislatio­n. How can they possibly be independen­t and impartial when it shows that they are culpable and guilty of the deaths of our children?”

She said her assembly has written to the UN Office of the

High Commission­er for Human Rights and made a formal request for investigat­ions, but has not heard back yet.

A number of lawyers went to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court in 2021 to ask for investigat­ions into the possible gross human rights violations with respect to those institutio­ns. The lawyers were turned away, she said.

“I believe that we’re gonna continue to press on the ICC to also look at this situation in Canada with respect to our children, who went to those institutio­ns and those children who died in those institutio­ns especially.”

RoseAnne Archibald

National chief of the Assembly of First Nations

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