Events leading up to the missing women roundtable discussion

After a national roundtable last week into the 1000 missing and murdered indigenous issue, there is still little consensus on how to act on this crisis. Yet, days before the meeting with First Nations groups and the Federal government, a scathing report revealed that the federal government has ignored most of the more than 700 recommendations contained in 58 reports on violence against aboriginal women and girls. The Legal Strategy Coalition on Violence Against Indigenous Women, a group of organizations including Amnesty International, released a report, bringing to light the depth and breadth of this issue. Here, The Ryersonian has gathered some key reports and events from 1996 to 2015, calling for government to act on the issues of missing and murdered indigenous women in Canada.

1996-03-01 00:00:00

Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples

In 1996, the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples was released, with sections bringing strong attention to the high levels of violence against indigenous women, the unequal treatment and imbalance of power. The report also concluding: “The main policy direction, pursued for more than 150 years, first by colonial then by Canadian governments, has been wrong.”

2004-10-01 00:00:00

Stolen Sisters Report

October 2004, Amnesty International releases Stolen Sisters reports on stories of missing and murdered Indigenous Women over 30 years, with inquiries into stories dating back to 1971.

2012-03-01 00:00:00

Robert Pickton Case

In 2012, The Robert Pickton Case in British Columbia sparked 'Forsaken: The Report of the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry Executive Summary' which was four volumes documenting the indigenous women whom died because of this man.

2012-09-01 00:00:00

Idle No More movement

Throughout 2012, media attention exploded on First Nations issues as the Idle No More, a grassroots movement, sparked protests the country against Stephen Harper’s Bill C-45, among other culminating issues with legislation, including violence against women.

2013-02-01 23:31:02

RCMP report on 1200 missing indigenous women

In 2013, The RCMP release report on missing and murdered indigenous women that publicly released their statistics and records of missing women dating back to the 1950. It is also known, however, that many cases go unreported or undocumented.

2013-02-01 23:31:02

Human Rights Watch and RCMP abuse

In 2013, Human Rights Watch also released an 89-page report on the B.C RCMP abuse of indigenous women called for a National Inquiry

2014-05-01 00:00:00

United Nations report into missing women

In July, 2014, The United Nations issued a special report, consolidating the crisis in Canada with missing women and highlighting 29 official inquires with 500 recommendations for action have been put forward since 1996.

2014-08-01 00:00:00

Death of Tina Fontaine

In 2014 Media attention was given to the brutal and graphic murder of 15-year-old Tina Fontaine in Winnipeg, bringing more attention to the crisis with missing and murdered indigenous women. This renewed calls to the government for an inquiry into Canada's missing and murdered aboriginal women. After Justice Minister Peter MacKay rejected calls for an inquiry, The Canadian Human Rights Commission added its voice to the crowd. "Tina must not disappear into the oblivion of statistics: almost 1,200 missing and murdered aboriginal women over the past three decades," acting chief commissioner of the Canadian Human Rights Commission David Langtry told the CBC.

2014-10-01 00:00:00

Poll shows 3/4 Canadians says missing women is a crisis

2015 Angus Reid Poll released right before the roundtable discussions found that three-quarters of Canadians think missing and murdered indigenous women this is an urgent issue, despite the conservative government consistently stating it is “Not a high priority, to be honest.”

2015-02-01 00:00:00

10th Annual Strawberry Ceremony for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.

In February 2015, Aboriginal and non-aboriginal people across the country marched for the 25th year to honour the lives of the missing and murdered women across the country.

2015-02-26 00:00:00

Legal Strategy Coalition says government ignored 58 studies over 20 years

In February 2015, Legal Strategy Coalition Report releases scathing report, consolidating 58 studies from over the last 20 years that accuse the canadian governments of refusing to take actions and recommendation for violence against indigenous women.

2015-02-26 00:00:00

Unfounded rhetoric by federal government before roundtable

In February 2015, just prior to the roundtable discussion, the Minister of Status of Women, Kelly Leitch, announced that the problem is mostly due to domestic violence, despite the RCMP report showing non-aboriginal women were more likely to die from domestic violence than indigenous women.

2015-02-26 22:22:07

Indigenous woman goes missing while roundtable discussion is underway

In February 2015, the long-awaited roundtable discussion was held in Ottawa. During the roundtable discussion, a missing indigenous women was posted. No media outlets covered this fact outside of the discussions. No national inquiry was launched.

2015-02-26 22:22:07

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2015-03-06 00:00:00

United Nations calls again for National Inquiry

"The Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women said Canada has violated the rights of aboriginal women by failing to thoroughly investigate why they are targeted for violence. The body is adding its voice to domestic calls for an inquiry, which the Harper government has repeatedly said isn’t necessary. A committee report released Friday said police and the justice system have failed to effectively protect aboriginal women. It says native women face grave and systematic violations of their rights," reported Canadian Press for Macleans Magazine,

Events leading up to the missing women roundtable discussion

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