Sunday, February 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau Berated At Hill Gathering Over Missing, Murdered Women Inquiry

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Oct, 2017 04:00 PM
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stood quietly with his head down Wednesday as families expressed extreme anger toward him about the inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.
     
    Trudeau must reset the inquiry led by four commissioners, Maggie Cywink from Whitefish River First Nation said in a speech to an annual gathering on Parliament Hill.
     
    "If you want to be remembered as a prime minister who is healing ties with First Nations, then you must start with our women and families," said Cywink, whose sister, Sonya Cywink, was found slain near London, Ont. in 1994.
     
    "Will you be seen as yet another politician, in the very long list of politicians, who simply peddled in the age-old craft of empty promises?
     
    The government's version of reconciliation looks a lot like colonization, said Connie Greyeyes from Fort Saint John, B.C.
     
    "How do you come out here and say that you support families?" she said. 
     
    "How dare you come out here and say these things?"
     
    Before Trudeau began to address the audience, someone in the crowd urged that he "go home."
     
    He went on to thank family members for sharing their frustration and for challenging him to do better.
     
    "The missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls inquiry is something that I have long believed in, long supported," he said. "It was never going to be easy."
     
    His wife, Sophie Gregoire Trudeau, told family members she can't imagine what it is like to lose a loved one for "senseless reasons."
     
    "I stand here before you as a woman, as a mother, as a fellow Canadian, as a human being," she said. "We are suffering with you."
     
    One of the inquiry's commissioners, Michele Audette, attended the Hill event.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP Honour Mountie They Say Died Responding To Illegal Border Crossing Call

    RCMP Honour Mountie They Say Died Responding To Illegal Border Crossing Call
    REGINA — An annual RCMP service that honours fallen Mounties has this year paid tribute to an officer who the force says died while he was responding to a call about an illegal border crossing.

    RCMP Honour Mountie They Say Died Responding To Illegal Border Crossing Call

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Says Apology, Other Defences Mitigate Defamation Suit

    Horgan and B.C. Jobs Minister Bruce Ralston both filed statements of defence in court last week in reaction in a civil lawsuit launched by Gordon Wilson.

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Says Apology, Other Defences Mitigate Defamation Suit

    Mitchell Casavechia, Halifax Daycare Worker, Charged With Sexually Assaulting Child

    Mitchell Casavechia, Halifax Daycare Worker, Charged With Sexually Assaulting Child
    A Halifax daycare provider says it is trying to reassure parents after one of its employees was charged with sexually assaulting a young child on the job.

    Mitchell Casavechia, Halifax Daycare Worker, Charged With Sexually Assaulting Child

    Sped Through Construction Zone: Truck Driver Gets 3 Years For Killing 3 Teens

    Sped Through Construction Zone: Truck Driver Gets 3 Years For Killing 3 Teens
    MELFORT, Sask. — A truck driver who killed three Saskatchewan teenagers when his speeding semi rear-ended their car in a construction zone has been sentenced to three years in prison.

    Sped Through Construction Zone: Truck Driver Gets 3 Years For Killing 3 Teens

    Winnipeg Man Pleads Not Guilty To Letter-Bomb Charges, Fights DNA Evidence

    Winnipeg Man Pleads Not Guilty To Letter-Bomb Charges, Fights DNA Evidence
    WINNIPEG — A man accused of sending letter bombs in the mail, including one that cost his ex-wife's lawyer her hand, pleaded not guilty Monday to five counts of attempted murder and to several explosives-related charges.

    Winnipeg Man Pleads Not Guilty To Letter-Bomb Charges, Fights DNA Evidence

    Four-Year Sentence For Man Found Guilty Of Smuggling Tamil Migrants To Canada

    Four-Year Sentence For Man Found Guilty Of Smuggling Tamil Migrants To Canada
    VANCOUVER — A Sri Lankan man found guilty of smuggling Tamil migrants to Canada has walked free after receiving a four-year prison sentence.

    Four-Year Sentence For Man Found Guilty Of Smuggling Tamil Migrants To Canada