Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Hundreds March For Missing And Murdered Women In Vancouver's Downtown Eastside

The Canadian Press, 14 Feb, 2015 03:00 PM
    VANCOUVER — There was grief and outrage on the streets of Vancouver's Downtown Eastside on Saturday, as hundreds gathered to remember aboriginal women who have died or gone missing.
     
    Family members clutched photos of lost daughters and sisters as they led the 25th Annual Downtown Eastside Women's Memorial March, stopping to lay roses at spots where their loved ones were killed.
     
    A woman who identified herself as the mother of Cassandra Antone, who was killed in 1997, told the crowd that the deaths of indigenous people amount to genocide and must be stopped.
     
    Aboriginal women in traditional clothing beat drums and sang as the  protest began just after noon at Main Street and Hastings Street.
     
    Organizers of the march say they continue to reiterate the call for a public inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women.
     
    They also say they support the family of Stephanie Lane, whose mother Michele Pineault has called for her daughter's remains to be re-tested and for a new murder charge to be laid against serial killer Robert Pickton.
     
    Betsy Bruyere, carrying a sign that read "Am I next?," says she struggled to attend the rally this time, after more than a decade of marching in support of murdered women.
     
    "I was kind of depressed," she says. "It just doesn't stop and it looks like it's getting worse — the situation, the crisis, the invisible war against indigenous women. They're trying to kill us, I'm pretty sure of it."
     
    The 59-year-old Anishinabe woman says she supports the "Am I Next" campaign, which was launched to raise awareness of missing and murdered indigenous women. But Bruyere adds that it's an important question.
     
    "There is certainty that within the next couple of minutes, within the next hour, by the end of the day, there's going to be an indigenous woman murdered," she says.
     
    "I'd like people to educate themselves, especially men, and I'd like women to find their power, their voice. Let's all work together and put an end to this. Because this really is too much."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Company's Offices Searched As Part Of Investigation Into B.C. Mine Disaster

    Company's Offices Searched As Part Of Investigation Into B.C. Mine Disaster
    VANCOUVER — The B.C. Conservation Service has searched two offices of the company that owns the Mount Polley mine as part of an investigation into a tailings pond spill that gushed millions of cubic metres of wastewater into streams and rivers.

    Company's Offices Searched As Part Of Investigation Into B.C. Mine Disaster

    Medieval Religious Document From 1245 Now In UBC Library Collection

    Medieval Religious Document From 1245 Now In UBC Library Collection
    VANCOUVER — The University of British Columbia has obtained a 770-year-old religious document that its professors say will be an invaluable resource for students and teachers.

    Medieval Religious Document From 1245 Now In UBC Library Collection

    Club Of 1: B.C. Finance Minister Singles Out Province For Balanced Budget

    Club Of 1: B.C. Finance Minister Singles Out Province For Balanced Budget
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia is preparing to enter an exclusive economic club by bucking a trend of deficit budgets nationwide, says the province's finance minister.

    Club Of 1: B.C. Finance Minister Singles Out Province For Balanced Budget

    Baird's exit creates hole at home, abroad at crucial time for both

    Baird's exit creates hole at home, abroad at crucial time for both
    OTTAWA — One of Stephen Harper's most experienced ministers resigned his plum foreign affairs post Tuesday, leaving a void around the Conservative cabinet table at a critical juncture in both domestic and international affairs.

    Baird's exit creates hole at home, abroad at crucial time for both

    Ghomeshi lawyer appears in Toronto court, next hearing on Feb. 26

    Ghomeshi lawyer appears in Toronto court, next hearing on Feb. 26
    TORONTO — Lawyers for Jian Ghomeshi appeared briefly in a Toronto courtroom this morning to set a new date in his headline-grabbing sexual assault case.

    Ghomeshi lawyer appears in Toronto court, next hearing on Feb. 26

    Toronto Zoo's polar bear cup moving to Winnipeg zoo to be with other bears

    Toronto Zoo's polar bear cup moving to Winnipeg zoo to be with other bears
    TORONTO — The Toronto Zoo's baby polar bear is ready to leave home.

    Toronto Zoo's polar bear cup moving to Winnipeg zoo to be with other bears