Thank you, Chair, and committee members for making space for Women of the Métis Nation - Les Femmes Michif Otipemisiwak, to come and present today.
Human trafficking is of great concern to all of us. I'm presenting to you from the motherland of the Métis nation and Treaty 6 territory in Edmonton, Alberta.
The impacts of Métis displacement from their homeland, the harms experienced through issues like residential school systems, their loss of culture, the abuse experienced from our communities within the child welfare system and the sixties scoop means that many of our families and communities struggle and are disconnected from their culture and their ability to heal within their communities.
Violence is a part of our lives each and every day. We really appreciate organizations like ONWA which have brought statistics to you. However, many of the Métis have no statistics, and the data is not tracked. We don't know what our numbers are. We do understand that systemic causes have led to the devaluation of Métis women and gender diverse people. Further, we see a horrific normalization of sexual violence within our country.
Métis women, girls and gender diverse people are more vulnerable to traffickers because of colonialism, intergenerational trauma, histories of unresolved physical and sexual abuse and diversabilities. Mental health and poverty also form some of the reasons why many of our women are vulnerable to being human trafficked.
Women have always been specifically targeted for violence through federal policies and legislation, such as strict policies, marriage laws and the rights to property that were created to undermine family, community and the political structures that existed within our communities.
We further acknowledge our vulnerabilities that lead to trafficking by age. Children from zero to six.... We even have them on birth alerts. We're aware of just how our communities are susceptible to the kinds of vulnerabilities that are created by such things.
Youth may be experiencing a loss of their culture and identity. They are doing unhealthy sexual behaviours, because of the experiences they have from being disconnected from their communities, families, and structures.
Into early adulthood, traffickers might recruit Métis youth from across our Métis nation motherland with a promise of a glamourous life, which adds to further isolating them from their communities. We see vulnerabilities in youth aging out of care, those involved with the justice system, or those otherwise disconnected from their family and community.
No reports exist on Métis perspectives of human trafficking and anti-human trafficking. We need to be able to form pathways for healing, and support survivor engagement to ensure Métis-specific strategies are addressing the unique realities of Métis women and 2SLGBTQIA+ people.
Human traffickers follow the money by luring girls and women into areas where they're very close to their resource-based industries or camps where young men are there to find ways to exploit them. There are several corridors in human trafficking where our girls have been noticed, from Thunder Bay to Toronto, down to Minnesota, from Winnipeg to North Dakota, and from Vancouver to Washington. Alberta has also been a favourite destination in recent years with Calgary and Edmonton as long-time hot spots. Secondary routes lead to resource towns, such as Fort McMurray, Alberta, in providing isolation and protection away from anti-trafficking initiatives.
Formal statistics reflecting the number of Métis women and 2SLGBTQ people, who are trafficked, are inadequate for many reasons, including the underground nature of the industry and the under-reporting by victims due to fear, coercion and the movement of those being trafficked.
We would like to make some recommendations that we're hoping this committee, with its study, would be able to do.
The national—