Stolen Sisters: No more Indigenous women lost to violence

 

Stolen Sisters




“Families like mine all over Canada are wondering how many more sisters and daughters we have to lose before real government action is taken.”






These are the words of Darlene Osborne of the Norway House Cree First Nation in northern Manitoba.

Darlene’s family has known terrible tragedy. 

In 1971, nineteen-year-old Helen Betty Osborne was abducted by four white men The Pas, Manitoba. She was raped and murdered in a brutal crime a judge later called ” a racist and sexist act.”






Three decades later, in March 2003, Felicia Solomon, a sixteen-year-old cousin of Helen Betty Osborne, went missing in Winnipeg. Family members expressed frustration that police were slow to respond to the disappearance of this high school student. The first missing persons posters were distributed by her family, not the police. Three months later it was determined that Felicia had been murdered. No one has ever been charged with the crime.






The role of racism and discrimination in violence against Indigenous women has been documented by Amnesty International in our Stolen Sisters report. And it has been acknowledged by police and government officials. But not enough is being done to stop these racist and sexist attacks.






These terrible crimes are part of long-standing and deep-rooted patterns of discrimination and impoverishment that put so many Indigenous women and girls in harm’s way. According to a government statistic, young Indigenous women are five times more likely than other women of the same age to die as the result of violence.

Indigenous Rights

There are over 370 million Indigenous people worldwide. They are often among the most marginalized and frequently victimized sectors of society. A long history of dispossession, and ongoing discrimination at all levels of society, has led to widespread impoverishment, ill-health and homelessness.

Indigenous women face a double burden of discrimination. With the loss of traditional ways of life, indigenous women often lose status in their own societies. Frustration and strife in the community is mirrored by violence in the household. For the growing numbers of indigenous women who have migrated to urban settings, racism and discrimination in the larger society leads to a heightened risk of violence as well as unequal access to the protection of the police and courts.

Amnesty International is currently campaigning globally to strengthen the implementation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The Declaration was adopted by the UN General Assembly on September 13, 2007 after more than two decades of negotiation and debate. It makes a unique and much needed contribution to the survival and well-being of some of the world’s most marginalized and frequently victimized peoples by affirming a wide range of rights, including the right of self-determination, land rights, rights to cultural identity, and protection against violence and discrimination.

Please sign Amnesty’s e-petition calling for a national plan of action to stop violence against Indigenous women and girls in Canada.

Take Action

Please sign Amnesty’s e-petition calling for a national plan of action to stop violence against Indigenous women and girls in Canada.

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3362 people have taken action on this case.

To the Minister of Public Safety:

I call on the federal government to work with Indigenous women's organizations to establish a comprehensive, national plan of action to stop violence against Indigenous women and girls. Such a plan of action must:

* Uphold and promote the rights of all Indigenous women and girls whether they live on reserve or in other communities.

* Ensure effective coordination of federal, provincial, and territorial policies, programs and services affecting the lives and well-being of Indigenous women and girls.

* Address long-standing and deep-rooted patterns of discrimination and impoverishment that put so many Indigenous women and girls in harm’s way.

* Ensure that police in every jurisdiction have clear guidance on effective and appropriate responses to threats to Indigenous women's lives and safety, including missing persons protocols based on clear recognition of the heightened risk faced by Indigenous women and girls.

* Help Indigenous women escape from abusive relationships and dangerous situations by ensuring adequate, sustained funding to shelters and frontline organizations providing culturally appropriate services.

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  • Recent Messages

  • This is an issue of the utmost importance. I hope you will address it as soon as you as appointed to the Ministry.
    Yvonne in Calgary, AB


    We know that the rape and killing of our Women is also represented in rape and killing of our Mother Earth. IT ALL NEEDS TO STOP!
    Kahkaygoh


    These women should have the same rights as "ALL" women. When they go missing the cops should do all they can immediately & for as long as it takes
    mandy in pickering, ON


    A nation must care for all its people, especially those whose land and culture have been stolen.
    Edwin in Victoria, British Columbia, BC


    What are you waiting for?
    Warren in Delta, BC


    We have such a shameful history when it comes to Indigenous peoples. Lets make amends, right wrongs, make the extra effort to take these women out of harms way.
    Ruth in Toronto, ON


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