December 2nd, 2024
December 2nd, 2024
QUEEN’S PARK – Deputy Leader of the ONDP and critic for Indigenous and Treaty Relations Sol Mamakwa (Kiiwetinoong), made the following statement in response to the news of the 220 additional deaths linked to Indian Residential Schools in Ontario that were identified by a Coroner's probe:
“Inaction is a form of denialism. We cannot forget these children, whose deaths are not just heartbreaking, but each one is an injustice committed by the government, in a project of colonialism and systemic cultural genocide.”
“Although First Nations people in Ontario have always known about our relatives who never came home from the government-run Indian Residential Schools, it is still painful to hear, and especially to learn the stories of the atrocities and criminal negligence that led to the deaths of these children. The 656 deaths confirmed by the Ontario Office of the Chief are just the deaths from the recognized Indian Residential Schools and does not include the deaths of First Nations children at other government-run institutions, including the Indian Hospitals.”
“As Indian Residential School survivors across Ontario continue to search the school sites and adjacent crown lands for the remains of these children, the Ontario bureaucracy cannot continue put up barriers. It is past time for this government to commit fully to the actions needed to move forward with Truth and Reconciliation. Survivors of Indian Residential Schools deserve to heal, and all of us must take the steps that Survivors have told us again and again are needed.”
Background:
The Final Report of Independent Special Interlocutor for Missing Children and Unmarked Graves and Burial Sites, Kimberly Murray, laid out at least 13 obligations which called for action from provincial governments. The Ontario government must respond to the news reported today with a commitment to fulfilling the obligations in that report, including: