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Quebec Indigenous groups collecting stories of forced sterilization
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Quebec Indigenous groups collecting stories of forced sterilization
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MMIWG inquiry commissioner Michèle Audette appointed to Senate
The renowned advocate for womenâs rights and particularly, Indigenous womenâs rights, is one of three Quebecers appointed.
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CBC News ·
Michèle Audette is one of three Quebecers named to the Senate.(Jean-Claude Taliana/CBC)
Celebrated Indigenous women s rights advocate Michèle Audette was named to the Senate Thursday.Â
In a statement, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced that Governor General Mary Simon appointed five new senators to fill vacancies across the country.Â
Audette, a former commissioner responsible for conducting the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG), was one of three Quebecers named, along with businesswoman Amina Gerba and economist Clément Gignac.
Google doodle pays tribute to Indigenous women s rights activist Mary Two-Axe Earley
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Posted: Jun 03, 2021 3:51 PM ET | Last Updated: June 3
Pam Palmater, originally from Eel River Bar First Nation, says the use of the word evergreen in relation to the MMIWG national action plan signifies the lack of a plan. (Lisa MacIntosh)
Indigenous women s organizations and advocates say the newly released national action plan to end violence against Indigenous women and girls is not an adequate response to the crisis. This is not a national action plan, Pamela Palmater, chair in Indigenous governance at Ryerson University in Toronto told CBC News.
The plan, co-developed between federal and provincial governments, the National Families and Survivors Circle and several Indigenous partners, was released Thursday, the second anniversary of the final report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.