Good afternoon, Madam Chairperson, committee members, distinguished witnesses, and guests. My name is Francyne Joe, and I am the president of the Native Women's Association of Canada.
I am a proud member of B.C.'s Nlaka'pamux Nation, and while I have worked for Canada Border Services for over five years, I'm experienced in human resource management, economic development, entrepreneurship, and insurance, in an effort to educate and encourage aboriginal people to pursue their aspirations.
I'm here today with Lynne Groulx, NWAC director—more notably, she holds two degrees in law—and Marilee Nowgesic, NWAC's special advisor and liaison.
First, I would like to acknowledge the Algonquin Nation in whose traditional territory we are meeting here today.
Thank you for the opportunity to present to you today. I bring with me the voices of my ancestors, the concerns of aboriginal women from across Canada, and the hopes of our future leaders, our youth.
The Native Women's Association of Canada is the only national aboriginal organization in Canada that represents the voice, the interests, and the many concerns of aboriginal women. NWAC is made up of 12 provincial and territorial member associations from across the country, since 1974. Our network of first nations and Métis women spans across the north, south, east, and west into urban, rural, on- and off-reserve communities.
There are three key messages I would like to deliver today.
First, violence against indigenous women and girls is not new. From a traditional understanding, indigenous women cannot be separated from the impacts of colonization, systemic issues, and the policies and laws that have reduced the stability of our environment, the practice of our spirituality, and the expression of our inherent right to self-determination.
Violence takes on many forms—physical, sexual, emotional, psychological, spiritual, cultural, and financial. This often results in vulnerability and self-harm, such as depression, alcoholism, substance abuse, and suicide. Indigenous women are eight times more likely to be killed than non-aboriginal women. The rates of spousal assault are more than three times higher, and the spouse is not necessarily an aboriginal person.
As indigenous women, we have seen and witnessed the impacts of poverty, lower educational attainment, and overrepresentation of our children in the child welfare system, which is more than those who were in the Indian residential schools. Canada has only learned of the impacts of that through the work of the TRC. This list of vulnerable populations provided by Health Canada places indigenous women and children within most or all of the categories of vulnerable segments of the Canadian population to be negatively impacted by climate change.
NWAC has continued to fill a knowledge gap about indigenous women by looking beyond academic literature, gathering comprehensive evidence, and exposing how the police and justice systems have responded to women.
The second message is that we have a need for current indigenous and gender-specific perspectives in the development of policies, legislation, public safety, prevention strategies, and social campaigns that resonate with current population trends.
In 2005, NWAC began to raise awareness of the violence against indigenous women. Unfortunately, the voices of families and communities in need were ignored. From 2005 to 2010, NWAC began to document all the known cases of missing and murdered indigenous women and girls. We discovered 582 in addition to the current numbers and cases collected by law enforcement. In 2014, the RCMP released its report documenting well over 1,000 indigenous women had gone missing or had been murdered. Of these incidents, 164 were missing, and 1,017 were homicide victims. There are likely more, but their ancestry or origins were not known and not recorded.
NWAC holds the only national database on the number and circumstances of missing and/or murdered indigenous women and girls in Canada. As per our fact sheet, 225 unsolved cases of missing and murdered indigenous women and girls; 105 missing for more than 30 days as of November 4, 2013, whose cause of disappearance was categorized at the time as unknown, or foul play suspected; 120 unsolved homicides between 1980 and 2012.
Within Canada it is crucial that indigenous women be included as a meaningful partner in the discussions on prevention and safety. NWAC is the organization that has the ability to provide the expertise on indigenous and gender-specific perspectives.
The third message we want to bring is that the meaningful consultation with indigenous women needs to be done in compliance with and respect to the principles set out in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, first of all, article 18 and article 21(2) of UNDRIP, with respect to indigenous rights to participate in decision-making and the state's obligation to take account of particular rights of indigenous women. The policy of the legislation must be informed by evidence and by those who are impacted by it. Legislation must be reviewed so that the justice and conviction or sentences are increased where violence has been committed, and this would include, but is not limited to, the recent incidents at Val-d'Or. As well, increased public awareness is needed of the human rights crisis in terms of lack of safety and protection of indigenous women.
We need to look at the investment factor of indigenous women in Canada through skills and development, employment and education, and opportunities to participate in the economy. As indigenous women, we contribute 90% of our income back to our families and our communities.
While we are currently working on addressing the procedures and processes that will drive the missing and murdered indigenous women and girls inquiry commission, we are the lead organization for indigenous women to bring their issues, their concerns, and sometimes their missing voices to effectively address the crisis of violence against indigenous women and girls. It will be through raising public awareness aimed at changing attitudes which devalue indigenous women and girls and the contributions of indigenous peoples as an educational tool for violence prevention.
Kukshem. Thank you very much for your time.