Thanks for asking that question. The sad truth is we hear about those women often in their death. We had the death of a woman not long ago; her husband killed her. There was a 10-month warrant out for his arrest in a small community where there's no RCMP detachment and nobody bothered. The RCMP basically, in my view, didn't bother to pick him up. In my view, it wasn't that important to them.
In Nunavut and the Northwest Territories, the level of violence is extremely high against women. The level of targeted violence is at epidemic rates. Not long ago, we had a story about a woman whose husband had tortured her for three days. He put their children in a closet. He tortured her--literally for days--and then left the home and went to work, because that's fairly common.
Some of the women I know were asking why he wasn't charged with attempted murder. Why wasn't he charged with torture? The sad truth is he didn't intend to murder her; he just intended to send a message. That's how we often hear from women who are living in communities that don't have RCMP detachments. They are living in communities where there really is condoned violence. There really is sort of an underground message that you have a right to rape any woman you want, or do anything to any woman, because you have to teach her a lesson.
I'll just go through a quick court case that we had recently. Not to bore you, but the question is just so critical and not many people ask it. We had a court case where a woman went to work at a mine. You should expect to be safe in your workplace. But she went to work at a mine and a man from her community tried to sexually assault her three times at the mine site. She felt unprotected at the mine. She took it to the RCMP and the guy was charged. There really wasn't one person in her community who supported her. The MLA wrote a support letter for the guy. The chief wrote a letter of support for the guy. There was a medicine person in court for the guy. The pastor was there for the guy.
It is still kind of shocking, because there was me and the woman on one side of the court and the whole community on the other side. It's so important to understand that. I was trying to figure out what was going on, so I said to the people in the community that I know, “What's happening? How come this woman isn't getting the support?” They said, “Well, she's not getting support because she's a slut. That's what it boils down to.” And this is from women too. They said she was in a relationship with that guy. It's all about that. I went back to the woman and said, “Gee, that's what people are saying. Why is that?” She said she was never in a relationship with the man. He raped her when she was 13. Her oldest child is a result of that rape, and that's what they're calling a relationship. He would drive around in the community and tell her to get in his truck, and she did.
Not many people really look closely at that level of extreme violence that I believe is present in lots of communities--not just northern communities, not just aboriginal communities. But underground and underneath it all, I hear about those stories, pretty blatantly, and probably because I've lived here that long.
So when you're looking at economics and basic money and basic income... That's why I go back to the high level of trauma. It's never been studied, but I believe women in the north live in a war zone, and if you really looked at the level of post-traumatic stress disorder--which I believe is a disability--you would realize that women are ultimately immobilized here around post-traumatic stress disorder. They're cast as drunks who can't quite control themselves. They're really cast as something totally different from what they are. They need protection.
If you go back to the United Nations, the United Nations is making Canada accountable, in theory, for its failure to protect Inuit, first nations, and Métis women. Those women are not protected, and they're certainly not protected in communities in the north where there's no RCMP detachment. Even if there's an RCMP detachment, they're often not protected. So you can imagine how bad that is with no protection.