|
| |

Aboriginal Women in Canada: Lives Valued in Pennies
Wednesday, October 12 2005 @ 01:04 PM MDT
Contributed by: Ivy Ross
Canada and its law enforcement officials have become notorious
for their indifference to the deaths and violence inflicted upon Aboriginal
Peoples. Yet, more importantly, Canada has been found to be increasingly
indifferent to the value of life placed upon the head of an Aboriginal woman.
Canada has often failed to provide an adequate standard of protection to
Aboriginal women and it has become more readily apparent as more Aboriginal
women go missing, more are found murder and a huge majority of the cases are not
investigated. They, the missing and murdered Aboriginal women, seem to be seen
as just another dead Indian. The fact still remains that the life of an
aboriginal woman is a life valued in pennies. This article will hopefully show
you, the reader, how the RCMP and Canada has failed to adequately address the
discrimination, racism and violence against Aboriginal women but more
importantly, how the RCMP and Canada has failed to protect them.
The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Article 6 of the
Covenant provides, in part, as follows, "Every human being has the inherent
right to life. This right shall be protected by law. No one shall be arbitrarily
deprived of his life." The failure to respond quickly and appropriately to
threats to Aboriginal women's lives means that Canadian officials have failed to
live up to their responsibility to prevent violations of Aboriginal (Indigenous)
women's fundamental human rights. Statistics from 1996 show that Aboriginal
women, between the ages of 25 and 44, who had status under the Indian Act, were
five times more likely to die as a result of violence. They were five time more
likely to die of violence as opposed to non-Aboriginal women between the ages of
25 and 44.
Due to the fact that a disproportionate number of Aboriginal
women that are in the sex trade, either to support a drug habit or to make ends
meet, they are considered expendable by the RCMP and the Canadian government.
This apathy towards women in the sex trade is doubled when it comes to
Aboriginal women in the sex trade. The role of racism and sexism in compounding
the threat to Aboriginal women in the sex trade was noted by Justice David
Wright on the 1996 trial of John Martin Crawford. Serial killer, John Martin
Crawford, was convicted in 1996 of killing three Aboriginal women, Eva Taysup,
Shelley Napope, and Calinda Waterhen, in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. The isolation
and social marginalization increased the risk of violence those three Aboriginal
women faced. The resulting vulnerability of Indigenous women has been exploited
by Indigenous and non-Indigenous men to carry out acts of extreme brutality
against Indigenous women (Amnesty International Report). Mr.Crawford has noted
that the reason why he killed those three women were because one, they were
young; second, they were women; third, they were native; and fourth, they were
prostitutes. Crawford treated them with contempt, brutality, and he was
determined to destroy whatever the victims had left of their humanity. Warren
Goulding, one of the few journalists to cover the trial, has commented: "I don't
get the sense the general public cares much about missing or murdered aboriginal
women. It's all part of this indifference to the lives of aboriginal people.
They don't seem to matter as much as white people." While look at more cases,
Goulding’s observation seems to be based upon facts and I agree.
Another more recent case of neglect and failure to protect the lives of
Aboriginal women happened in 2000. The case is more commonly known as the
Winnipeg 911 murders. This is a case where two aboriginal women, Corrine
McKeown, 52, and Doreen Leclair, 51 were murdered after having called 911 five
times over an eight hour period to get help. No help came and they died from the
wounds inflicted upon their bodies. Many have speculated that if the call had
come from a wealthier neighborhood or from someone who was white the women would
still be alive today. Is it true that had they not been Aboriginal women and had
the call come from a wealthy neighborhood, would their lives have been saved
(CBC News-In Depth, Film, July, 2, 2004)? Yet, less than 24 hours later, William
Dunlop, Corrine's former boyfriend, was arrested. He pleaded guilty to
second-degree murder, and is serving a life sentence with no possibility of
parole for 17 years. No one knows for certain, but a lot of native activist
believe that this systemic racial discrimination, that was apparent during the
Winnipeg 911 Murders, has cost more than 500 Aboriginal women their lives and
cost them to lose their right to justice (Sisters in Spirit Campaign, 2004).
These tragedies experienced by the First Nation communities are becoming so
common that they appear at least once a month in the newspapers circulated
around Canada.
A number of high profile cases of assaulted, missing or murdered Aboriginal
women and girls have appeared in mainstream media. This has helped to focus
greater public attention on violence against Aboriginal women in specific cities
but in most cases this public attention has come very late. For example, in two
separate instances in 1994, 15 year old Aboriginal girls, Roxanne Thiara and
Alisha Germaine were found murdered in Prince George, British Columbia. The body
of a third 15 year old girl, Ramona Wilson, who disappeared in 1994, was found
in April 1995 (Amnesty International October 2004, Report, p.14). Ramona’s body
was found in Smithers, British Columbia. Only in 2002, after the disappearance
of a 26 year old Caucasian woman, Nicole Hoar, while hitchhiking along a road
that connects Prince George to Smithers, did media attention focus on the
unsolved murders and other disappearances along what has been dubbed "the
highway of tears". While doing some research for NWAC (Native Women’s
Association of Canada), Terri Brown, after interviewing many people from
Tsimshian, Gitksan and Nisga’a Nations has found 31 missing women to be the
unofficial number of those victims of "the highway of tears".
A second more prominent case in recent history is the case against Robert
Pickton. Robert Pickton is from Port Coquitlam, British Columbia, has been
called Canada’s worst serial killer. He is responsible for the deaths of 27
women and 60% of those women were Aboriginal. Sixteen of the missing women are
Indigenous, a number far in excess of the proportion of Aboriginal women living
in Vancouver (Amnesty International Report, Oct/04, p.14). Police and city
officials had long denied that there was any pattern to the disappearances or
that the women were in any particular danger. Nearly three-quarters of the
Vancouver East Side’s prostitutes were Aboriginals. The official search for the
missing women began in September 1998 after an Aboriginal Group send police a
list of victims allegedly murdered in Downtown Eastside, with a demand for a
thorough investigation. Only then were the missing women of Vancouver’s Eastside
actually looked at seriously and investigated. Several Aboriginal families
complain of "interference" by Vancouver Police Department’s native liaison unit,
allegedly telling them not to speak with journalists. Victim Helen Hallmark’s
mother defied the ban, declaring, "We need to meet among ourselves and I’m tired
of the native liaison unit telling us what to do."(Vancouver, CBC British
Columbia) In response, Helen Hallmark’s mother, has decided to retain legal
counsel and resolve the matter in court.
A shocking case of sexual assault and assault done by the hands of a former
British Columbia Provincial Court Judge grabbed Canada’s attention in May, 2004.
David William Ramsey pleaded guilty to buying sex from and assaulting four
Aboriginal girls aged, 12, 14, 15 and 16, who had appeared before him in court.
The crimes were committed between 1992 and 2001. In June, David William Ramsey
was sentenced to seven years in prison. Aboriginal and women's groups say former
judge David Ramsay's attacks on young aboriginal women highlight the big problem
of child sex abuse. Ramsay had admitted he had picked up the young aboriginal
women on the streets of Prince George and taken them into the woods where he
paid for sex. The reckless disregard of Aboriginal women and female aboriginal
children’s bodies and their physical health was disregarded by former Judge
David William Ramsey. ''Aboriginal women and their children suffer tremendously
in contemporary Canadian society [and] the justice system has done little to
protect them,'' the Manitoba Justice Inquiry declared. Judge David William
Ramsey used his power for personal gain at the cost of Aboriginal women and
children he assaulted sexual and physically. This has furthered the mistrust
Aboriginal Canadians and Aboriginal women have of the Canadian Justice System
and its governing and enforcing bodies.
Aboriginal women are not safe on reserves as well and they are not safe from
battery in their own home by the hands of there Aboriginal partners. A March
1991 study by the Manitoba Association of Women and the Law found that the
statistics of a 1980 federal study, Wife Battering in Canada: A Vicious Circle,
still held: women endure anywhere from 11 to 39 episodes of abuse before seeking
help, and then they seek help more often from a shelter than from police.
The Government of Canada and the RCMP have failed to protect the Aboriginal
women of Canada. Individuals they are sworn to protect but those in power have
essentially marginalized and isolated the Aboriginal women and children instead.
Amnesty International believes that the first step to ending violence against
Aboriginal women would be to acknowledge the seriousness of the problem. All
levels of government should publicly condemn all violence against Aboriginal
women and children and to make it publicly known their plan of action to
exterminate it. What this author believes Canada and its law enforcing bodies
needs to do first, realize that the value they place upon Aboriginal women and
children’s lives is a life valued in pennies. That worthlessness seems to stem
from an entrenched sexist and racist ideology held close to those in power when
it comes to Aboriginal women and children, mainly those involved in the sex
trade. They, Aboriginal women, are still human beings and deserve to be treated
as such. With the lack of justice and the pursuit of it in many cases,
Aboriginal women will continue to go missing and murdered.
Serial killer who roamed Saskatoon met with indifference by Police, Media
www.missingpeople.net/serial_killer_who_roamed_saskato1.htm
Highway of Tears – A sixth family feels the pain
www.missingpeople.net/highway_16_disappearances-july_19,_2002.htm
Vanished: somewhere along the highway of tears
Nicole Hoar simply disappeared
www.missingpeople.net/vanished-somewhere_along_the_highway_of_tears-july_14,_2002.htm
Winnipeg 911 murders
www.cbc.ca/news/background/aboriginals/winnipeg911.html
The Killing Fields of Edmonton
www.missingpeople.net/the_killing_fields.htm
How Lindsay Kines and Sun Reporters broke missing women story
www.missingpeople.net/how_lindsay_kines.htm
Two former police officers join call for investigation
www.missingpeople.net/two_former_police_officers_join_call_for_investigation.htm
Vive Le Canada
| |
|