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Opinion: 'End the genocide': Little action on MMIWG calls for justice in the 3 years since the national inquiry concluded

The government needs to implement its proposed action plan. The families of the missing and murdered put their trust in a federal inquiry process, but have yet to receive that justice.
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The federal government released its long-awaited action plan last year, which addressed how it would implement the MMIWG calls for justice and 鈥渆nd the genocide.鈥

In 2008, Tashina Cheyenne General was murdered. This horrific crime was made even worse by the fact that .

Tashina was the granddaughter of Norma Jacobs, one of the contributors to this article. Norma is Wolf clan of the Cayuga Nation, from Six Nations and is a member of the .

Norma recalls:

“It was a great loss to our family as we were excited about a new life to be born, sadly we never got to greet my great-grandson, and we lost two precious lives.”

Norma and her family — and many others — have to deal with this reality every day. But they also have to deal with the federal government’s glacial pace when it comes to acting against what .

As settler academics, we (David and Andrea) have a responsibility to work with settler and Indigenous communities to promote awareness of the lack of federal government movement on the MMIWG .

Three years after the final report

June 3 marks three years since the national inquiry and one year since .

The initial report concluded that “Indigenous women and girls are 12 times more likely to be murdered or to go missing than members of any other demographic group in Canada — .” But not much action has been taken.

The federal government last year, which addressed how it would implement the MMIWG calls for justice and “.”

While a step in the right direction, the plan was rightly critiqued by the Native Women’s Association of Canada for being “half a document” or “a plan without [an] implementation plan.” Timelines, budgets and responsibilities .

In recent years, anti-Indigenous racism has been impossible to ignore, clearly evident every time a news story breaks — from at former Indian Residential School sites across the country to the May 2022 .

The racism and sexism witnessed is not isolated. Senator Indigenous women are also subject to discrimination by police and the courts: “[The] justice system dispenses only injustice for Indigenous women.”

Indigenous women, while four per cent of the total Canadian population, make up 50 per cent of female inmates in penitentiaries. The Correctional Service of Canada recently announced that it’s in the process of hiring — which was one of the inquiry’s calls for justice.

A tentative hope

The inquiry offered hope of bringing about concrete changes. And Norma’s experiences were positive, however the government’s failure to act contradicts its responsibilities.

As Norma describes it:

“I was impressed with the inquiry because they took the time to listen and to understand our stories of the pain and heartache of waiting for someone to do something. We shared our truths, and it brought families together and created a circle of healing. This really highlights the trust people put in the process and how we are responsible for that trust. In Indigenous traditions, when we are told a story, there is a responsibility on the listener for that story. We become accountable to the story and to the relationship. Our government invited these stories and is failing to act.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau eventually acknowledged that , and pledged the government’s help.

Lack of action

In May 2022, Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Marc Miller of achieving its own goals. As he put it: “We’re failing as a country … To the extent that respectively falls in part on the federal government, we have to look at it through that lens.”

Miller reprised a familiar theme — that change will take a long time and that more patience is needed.

We believe this to be disingenuous, because the government can act and set a positive agenda. They must do more than simply make promises they cannot keep.

In the case of the , the government established a detailed website, — but as of May 2022, it has since 2015.

Trudeau’s government has failed to follow up on any of the calls to justice besides the proposed action plan, .

For families who have been traumatized by the dangers of living in a settler state that seems to disregard the lives of Indigenous Peoples, government inaction can be insulting. Norma says:

“I’m angry and very disappointed at the lack of focus on the continued violations against our Indigenous women. I am truly disgusted by the inaction by the prime minister and those cabinet ministers … I am tired of hearing words that mean nothing.”

Everyone can take action

There are ways for settlers to put ; they can also can rally together to pressure the government to do something.

We are tired of government excuses for inaction. The pandemic has exacerbated systemic racism and structural violence against Indigenous women, girls and 2SLGBTQQIA+ people. And discriminatory laws at all levels of government have meant that Indigenous Peoples are grossly over-represented when it comes to .

Continued chronic underfunding means that many Indigenous communities .

Action is urgently needed for the government to implement their proposed action plan. The families of the missing and murdered put their trust in a federal inquiry process, but have yet to receive that justice.

As , words are not enough. They must be “accompanied by concrete action at all levels of Canadian society,” and rooted “in a fundamental recognition of the human dignity and right to freedom of self-determining Indigenous Peoples.”

Those of us who are settlers are accountable for this: it’s our government. It’s time for the rest of us to show up as well.

The Conversation

David MacDonald receives funding from SSHRC. Andrea Breen receives funding from SSHRC. Norma Jacobs does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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