1,100 Missing Indigenous Women Reflects Human Rights 'Crisis' in Canada
October 15, 2020 | News | No Comments
Human rights violations against members of First Nations tribes in Canada has reached “crisis proportions,” says a UN official who on Tuesday released the landmark report, The Situation of Indigenous Peoples in Canada.
“It is difficult to reconcile Canada’s well-developed legal framework and general prosperity with the human rights problems faced by indigenous peoples in Canada that have reached crisis proportions in many respects,” writes James Anaya, UN special rapporteur on the rights of Indigenous people.
Exemplifying that crisis, Anaya notes, is the “disturbing phenomenon” of the more than 1,100 “missing and murdered aboriginal women and girls.”
Adding his voice to the growing chorus of those calling for an investigation into the disappearances, Anaya recommends that, “the federal Government should undertake a comprehensive, nation-wide inquiry into the issue of missing and murdered aboriginal woman and girls, organized in consultation with indigenous peoples.”
Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Commissioner Bob Paulson recently announced that over the past 30 years the federal police force has compiled a total of 1,186 cases of murdered and missing Indigenous women. Of that number, Paulson said, 1,026 have been murdered and 160 are missing.
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