Miller condemns violence against Indigenous peoples, supports independent inquiries

Today Canada’s Minister of Indigenous Services expressed his disgust with a number of incidents of police showing excessive force when dealing with Indigenous and racialized people that appeared on social media this week.

Marc Miller said he, “Watched in disgust yesterday a number of these incidents.” stressing that a car door is not a proper police tactic, referring to the incident in Nunavut where an RCMP officer rammed his vehicle door into a suspect he was arresting.

Miller says these incidents show disgraceful, dehumanizing, and violent acts. He says he doesn’t understand how someone dies during a wellness check, referring to the 26-year-old Indigenous woman shot by police during a “wellness check” in Edmundston, N.B. this week.

He says when he first saw the report, he thought it was some morbid joke, and that he along with many Canadians and Indigenous peoples living in Canada are “pissed and outraged” at this pattern of violence that keeps repeating itself.

Miller says he cannot speak for Indigenous peoples, but he says the proof is there, you can see it, and it is palpable and painful. He says police in Canada serve Canadians and Indigenous peoples of Canada not the opposite and that is something he says Canada needs to reckon as a society.

Miller spoke to the unrest in the United States, describing it “disgraceful”, and more a reason than any to follow through with each independent inquiry into these incidents and to bring justice forward.

Mo Fahim
Mo Fahim
The Moose News Reporter, If you see any news in the making contact The Moose News Team at 100news.moosefm.com or call 867-920-2523

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

GNWT and City of Yellowknife advance feasibility study on hosting 2035 Canada Winter Games

The Government of the Northwest Territories and the City of Yellowknife are working to advance a feasibility study to determine if the territory should pursue a bid to host the 2035 Canada Winter Games.

Mackenzie River and the Liard River Ice Crossing closing, Aklavik Access Road closure caution issued

The Northwest Territories department of Infrastructure has issued more seasonal road closure cautions for winter roads in the last days of April. Today a 72-hour closure caution was issued for the Aklavik Access Road but officials warned the road “may close sooner with little to no notice.”

Joint venture may be in works for NICO critical mineral project says Tłı̨chǫ̨ Government

The Tłı̨chǫ̨ Government says they plan to form a joint venture with Fortune Minerals Limited towards the construction of a proposed access road for the NICO critical minerals project.The Tłı̨chǫ̨ Government and the mineral company say they are pursuing project funding through the Critical Minerals Infrastructure Fund’s clean energy and transportation infrastructure program.

New modular housing units arrive in Behchokǫ̀

Five new modular housing units have arrived in Behchokǫ̀ for onsite assembly, the final phase of construction before the homes are ready for occupants.

Ceremony draws call to action remembering lost lives of Northern workers

A ceremony in Yellowknife remembering those who lost their lives on the job drew calls to action in an ongoing struggle for stronger workers’ safety protections in the North and across the country. It’s been more than four decades since the first National Day of Mourning. And its been over one century since the first workers compensation act in Canada received its third reading. Statistics show that each year about 1,000 people across the country do not come home from work.