Murdered and missing aboriginal women report 'groundbreaking,' advocates say

mentalfloss

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Jun 28, 2010
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Murdered and missing aboriginal women report 'groundbreaking,' advocates say

Advocates for a public inquiry into murdered and missing aboriginal women and girls are welcoming as "groundbreaking" an investigation into the issue by an international human rights commission.

The Inter-American Commission, which is affiliated with the Organization of American States, has been studying the issue for more than two years.

The investigation was requested by the Native Women's Association of Canada and Feminist Alliance for International Action in March 2012.

At a press conference in Ottawa to respond to the report, Dr. Dawn Harvard of the NWAC called it "truly groundbreaking."

"This report is the first in-depth examination of the murders and disappearances by an expert human rights body. These women and girls are being stolen from our families, from our communities, and it is time that somebody is taking it seriously," Harvard said.

Holly Johnson, of the Feminist Alliance for International Action, said the commission has spoken "loudly and clearly."

"Canadian governments have a lot of work to do," she said. "Contrary to our prime minister's assertion, this is not a sociological phenomenon ... [It] goes way beyond policing. Social and economic factors must also be addressed."

The report includes recommendations on how governments at both the federal and provincial/territorial level can address the situation.

The Conservative government has so far refused calls for a national public inquiry on the issue, saying it is more interested in taking action. Prime Minister Stephen Harper said in reaction to the recent murder case of Tina Fontaine that it was not part of a "sociological phenomenon," but rather a crime and should be treated as such.

But the federal government has agreed to attend a roundtable meeting after Canada's premiers emerged from their annual meeting in August calling for a national forum. It's expected to be held in February.

http://www.cbc.ca/m/news/politics/m...report-groundbreaking-advocates-say-1.2897707
 

mentalfloss

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Jun 28, 2010
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I post from all kinds of sources, but that wasn't even your original question.

Your original question is that my mind was made up on this issue - and it hasn't been.
 

Angstrom

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May 8, 2011
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What's going on is sexual predators unchecked and on the lose.

It's called not enough police officers on duty in that location.
Case closed.

Next.

If really these people wanted to stop this, could they not make a community neighbourhood watch?
And patrol around, I'm sure it wouldn't be that hard to figure out what's going on.

Do we really need to spend 50million dollars for a full government inquiry?
 

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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A feel good study that will accomplish zero. That is why the government is not squandering money on it. This is a large part of today's problem. Everything gets a study and nothing gets action.
 

skookumchuck

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Jan 19, 2012
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I post from all kinds of sources, but that wasn't even your original question.

Your original question is that my mind was made up on this issue - and it hasn't been.

Horse crap boy. Anything against Harper and company gives you a boner. btw i am not a Harper fan either but i respect some of their money saving more than i ever did with the libs.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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A feel good study that will accomplish zero. That is why the government is not squandering money on it. This is a large part of today's problem. Everything gets a study and nothing gets action.

I hope it accomplishes something or it would be a complete waste of da taxpayer's moneys.
 

Angstrom

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May 8, 2011
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I hope it accomplishes something or it would be a complete waste of da taxpayer's moneys.

Instead of sitting on their fat a$$'s they could build a community comity and take measures to make things safe for young girls.

This is at a municipal level.

The problem is about a bunch of lazy useless f¥cks that can't be bothered to do anything for themselves.
 

Colpy

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Nov 5, 2005
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Overall

Police-reported data indicates that solve rates are comparable between incidents involving Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal female victims of homicide. Overall, 5,770 of 6,551 incidents from 1980 to 2012 were solved.
In the data collected solve rates varied across the country, from as low as 80% (Nova Scotia) to as high as 100% (New Brunswick) for Aboriginal females, and as low as 84% (British Columbia) to as high as 100% (PEI, the Yukon and the Northwest Territories) for non-Aboriginal females. Solve rates for the provinces and territories are illustrated in Figure 10. These fluctuate significantly when the numbers involved are small, for example, in Atlantic Canada.
While solve rates remain similar between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal female homicides, certain homicides appear to be solved less frequently than homicides overall. For example, homicides involving women who were reported to be employed as prostitutes were solved at a significantly lower rate than homicides overall; for Aboriginal victims in the sex trade, the solve rate was 60%, whereas for non-Aboriginals it was 65%. Similarly, homicides involving female victims employed in other illegal activitiesFootnote 30 were cleared at a lower rate than the overall; Aboriginal victims had their cases solved 65% of the time and non-Aboriginal victims 60%.


Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women: A National Operational Overview - Royal Canadian Mounted Police


In other words, all the crying and moaning about government inaction on murdered aboriginal women is absolute BS, as the clearance rate in aboriginal female murder cases is comparible to that of non-aboriginal women.


As for the high rate of murder in aboriginal communities and populations, the aboriginals need to deal with that themselves. Some self-examination is necessary.


The great outcry is aimed in the wrong direction.
 

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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I hope it accomplishes something or it would be a complete waste of da taxpayer's moneys.

That is exactly what it will be. We know what the problem is and the police have a good idea of who is mostly responsible but to say so would be racial profiling. I can't wait to see the wording they use to avoid such an un PC result. The money would be much better spent on more policing and education.