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

Red Dress March to be held next week

Yellowknife’s annual Red Dress March will be taking place next week on May 5 from 12:30 pm to 1:30 pm.

Yellowknife Community Foundation to deliver its biggest batch of scholarships

The Yellowknife Community Foundation has cracked the door wide open on its student awards scholarships fund. The foundation says its scholarship fund is delivering 45 scholarships, its greatest number of scholarships to date, to support students in trade professions and academics across the territory. N.W.T. students pursuing post-secondary studies or a trades education in any field are eligible for scholarships worth up to $9, 500, with a total of 45 scholarships are being offered.

N.W.T. holds among highest rates of workplace fatalities

N.W.T. holds among highest rates of workplace fatalities proportionate to worker populations. Researchers from the University of Regina said N.W.T. and Nunavut's worker mortality rate between 2019 to 2023 was highest in the country. The latest records show that for 2024, 11 people died due to a work related incident in the territories of the North. Scientists noted that because of N.W.T.’s small community populations, one or more early deaths had a much greater impact on mortality rates.

Timmy’s smile cookies return for sweet cause this spring

Tim Horton’s is bringing more smiles to new moms and babies in Yellowknife with proceeds of their smile cookie sales going to the Stanton Hospital Foundation’s Paediatric and Obstetric care. Patty Olexin-Lang, the foundation's executive director says campaigns like Tim Horton’s smile cookie week can go a long way to helping the hospital with their wish list of equipment. “We're super grateful for Tim Hortons and smile cookie week,” says Olexin-Lang.

GNWT releases draft of UNDRIP action plan

The territorial government is has released their initial draft for a United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Action Plan and are asking for public input. An announcement released today invited general members of the public to review and submit questions or comments on the initial draft of the plan.