Sunday, February 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

Minister says reckoning on police violence against Indigenous people needed

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jun, 2020 06:07 PM
  • Minister says reckoning on police violence against Indigenous people needed

Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller says Canada needs a reckoning over a repeated and disgusting pattern of police violence against Indigenous people.

Miller says he "watched in disgust" video and reports this week of violence against a 22-year-old Inuk man in Nunavut and a 26-year-old First Nations mother in New Brunswick.

In the first, a graphic video shows an RCMP officer in Nunavut ramming the door of his car into the man walking along the road in Kinngait Monday evening. In the second, police went to check on the well-being of 26-year-old Chantel Moore in Edmundston, N.B., Thursday evening, and ended up shooting and killing her.

"A car door is not a proper police tactic, it's a disgraceful, dehumanizing and violent act," Miller said, at a news conference on Parliament Hill Friday morning. "I don't understand how someone dies during a wellness check. When I first saw the report I thought it was some morbid joke."

Miller was there to provide an update on the status of COVID-19 cases in Indigenous communities, but spent most of the nearly hour-long event answering questions about police violence and racism in Canada.

"Frankly along with many Canadians, Indigenous Peoples living in Canada, politicians in Canada, I'm pissed, I'm outraged. There needs to be a full accounting of what has gone on. This is a pattern that keeps repeating itself."

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau echoed him in a separate appearance Friday, saying he would be discussing the issue with the federal cabinet and the commissioner of the RCMP.

"We need a larger reflection on changing the systems that do not do right by too many Indigenous people and racialized Canadians," Trudeau said. Each of the incidents needs to be investigated fully, he said, but there are clearly larger issues that need to be tackled.

He refused to say specifically what the federal government might do.

"We have, continue to have, systemic racism in this country, systemic discrimination, that means racialized Canadians are vulnerable in these situations."

This isn't new, he said, but recent events have illuminated it, including for people who had not really seen it before.

The man who was struck by the officer's car in Nunavut was arrested and later beaten by another man also in the holding cell he was placed in, requiring him to be airlifted to Iqaluit for treatment. The 22-year-old, whose identity has not been made public, told CBC News in Nunavut that he wants the police officers involved in his arrest to be charged.

The Ottawa Police Service, which does independent investigations of police in Nunavut, has sent a team there but the officer who arrested the man has not been charged or suspended. He was flown out of the community and is on administrative leave.

Quebec's independent police investigation agency is going to help with the Edmundston shooting at the request of the RCMP, which is providing forensic support.

Moore was killed overnight Thursday after police were asked to do a wellness check. Edmundston police say their officer encountered a woman with a knife making threats. She was shot and killed at the scene.

Miller said he wants answers, and the family deserves answers, quickly.

"It was a wellness check and someone died," he said. "I can't process that."

Miller spoke of how horrified he was to see the physical fear in some of his staff when they visited Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory in February, during rail blockades protesting in solidarity with B.C. First Nations over the building of a natural gas pipeline through their territory.

"I felt safe around police forces and they didn't. I can't speak for them. But I can see it. It's palpable. It's painful."

Miller said as Canadians look south to the police violence against black Americans they need to be seeing and thinking more about what is happening in our own country.

"It is something we need to reckon as a society," he said.

Miller said he is open to the idea of adding body cameras to all police though he said videos coming from the United States prove they have not stopped the violence there. He also said police forces need to do better with both recruitment and training. It's not just rank-and-file officers but the senior leadership of police forces who need to do it, said Miller.

MORE National ARTICLES

Federal deficit likely now at $260 billion due to COVID-19, PBO says

Federal deficit likely now at $260 billion due to COVID-19, PBO says
Parliament's spending watchdog says the estimated deficit for the year has likely risen to about $260 billion, leaving the government with little fiscal firepower to stimulate an economic rebound.

Federal deficit likely now at $260 billion due to COVID-19, PBO says

Trudeau co-hosts UN COVID-19 conference as Canada continues Security Council bid

Trudeau co-hosts UN COVID-19 conference as Canada continues Security Council bid
Canada will co-host a major United Nations conference on dealing with the economic crisis spawned by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Trudeau co-hosts UN COVID-19 conference as Canada continues Security Council bid

Guns, drugs, cash seized in organized crime probe of Toronto area tow truck industry

Guns, drugs, cash seized in organized crime probe of Toronto area tow truck industry
Four alleged organized criminal organizations that operated as rival tow truck companies involved in a violent battle for territory in the Toronto area have been dismantled, police said Tuesday.

Guns, drugs, cash seized in organized crime probe of Toronto area tow truck industry

Military reports 39 cases of COVID-19 in members working in nursing homes

Military reports 39 cases of COVID-19 in members working in nursing homes
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the Canadian military will keep assisting in nursing homes in Ontario and Quebec, though 39 members of the Canadian Forces have come down with COVID-19 while doing so.

Military reports 39 cases of COVID-19 in members working in nursing homes

Vancouver Police arrest suspect for mischief after racist incident

Vancouver Police arrest suspect for mischief after racist incident
Vancouver Police arrested a man on Saturday afternoon after he smashed the window of a vehicle parked in Chinatown with two Asian women inside.

Vancouver Police arrest suspect for mischief after racist incident

Fate of two Canadians could be affected by Meng decision: former ambassador

Fate of two Canadians could be affected by Meng decision: former ambassador
A former ambassador to China says Wednesday's decision in the extradition case of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou could also determine the fate of two Canadians detained in China.

Fate of two Canadians could be affected by Meng decision: former ambassador