National Day Of Remembrance And Action On Violence Against Women

Battered Women’s Support Services Marks National Day Of Remembrance And Action On Violence Against Women

PRESS RELEASE

For immediate release

December 4, 2015

BATTERED WOMEN’S SUPPPORT SERVICES MARKS NATIONAL DAY OF REMEMBRANCE AND ACTION ON VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN

Twenty-six years after the École Polytechnique Massacre in Montreal, little has changed when it comes to the “war on women”.

“While violence against women is not inevitable it continues to persist.” Said Angela Marie MacDougall, BWSS Executive Director.  “We have seen some changes, however the reality remains that every six days a woman in Canada is killed by her intimate partner,   So far in 2015, 16 women have been murdered in British Columbia, 37 in the province of Ontario, and 138 in Canada overall at the hands of male violence.  We continue to see mass murders, murders of domestic violence victims, and Indigenous women.

The social imbalances are entrenched in our society, intimate partner violence, sexual harassment, rape culture on campus, and generalized violence against women is as endemic as ever.

Awareness is not enough to create the change needed; we need to have a national strategy to prevent violence against women and to ensure services are available for survivors of gender violence.

“Since the Montreal Massacre, over 1,200 Indigenous girls and women have gone missing or have been found murdered in Canada. This is caused by a history of violence beginning with colonization and continuing through with systemic discrimination”, says Brandy Kane, BWSS Manager, Indigenous Women’s Programs, “Although this violence is more visible by mainstream Canadian society, systemic changes have yet to be seen”.

To commemorate this year’s National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women on December 6th, BWSS affirms our connection with women’s groups around the province and all over Canada in solidarity and in action, participating in roundtables and critical discussions to further the vital action that needs to be taken to create social change.

We recognize that the onus and responsibility for social change cannot only fall on women’s groups , participants at all levels need to have serious conversation leading to a plan of action to end violence against girls and women.

Local Events:

Thursday, December 3, 12pm-1pm: SFU Women’s Center- Film and Memorial to the Victims of the Montreal Massacre

Thursday, December 3, 12pm-1:30pm: UBC, AMS Sexual Assault Support Centre – Mass shootings, Masculinity, and Misogyny: 26 Years After Ecole Polytechnique What’s Changed?”

Thursday, December 3, 7pm- 9pm: WAVAW – Feminist Understandings of Violence Against Women. VCC Staff Lounge

Saturday, December 5th, 10am-6pm: Vancouver Rape Relief and Women’s Shelter– Films, lectures and roundtables Vancouver Public Library Central Branch

Media enquiries

Angela Marie MacDougall, Executive Director, Battered Women’s Support Services

Tel. (604) 808 0507 E-mail: director@bwss.org

 

End violence against women and girls

BWSS commemorates International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women, Nov 25 by presenting a unique and memorable event.

PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release
November 12, 2015

BATTERED WOMEN’S SUPPORT SERVICES PRESENTS ‘BREAKING THE SILOS’

Battered Women’s Support Services (BWSS) commemorates International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women, November 25, 2015 by presenting a unique and memorable event.

Breaking the Silos is the theme for BWSS’s 2015 fundraising gala and it will be held on Wednesday, November 25th at the Terminal City Club in Vancouver, Coast Salish Territories. BWSS is delighted to present Severn Cullis-Suzuki as the keynote speaker and Global BC’s
Jill Krop as MC.

Breaking the Silos guests will enjoy a fabulous 3-course gourmet dinner with wine and a dynamic program that includes updates on BWSS programs, Breaking the Stereotypes, an eco-fashion show by BWSS social enterprise My Sister’s Closet, a featured performance by Women of Turtle Island Drum Group, the World Premiere of Compassion in a Kiss music video with live performance by Claire Mortifee, Young Nige with DJ K-Rec, an outstanding silent auction and much more!

“Each one of us comes from a woman. And ultimately, all of us, come from the Earth. Ancient truths, yet today we deny them. This denial allows extremist resource extraction, and where extreme extraction occurs, violence against women is rampant. Now the 6th Mass Extinction event is unfolding – a war on life itself, and a war on life givers. I am honoured to be invited to speak at the gala, and looking forward to talking about the fundamental connections between violence against the Earth and violence against women.” Severn Cullis-Suzuki

“Breaking the Silos is an excellent opportunity for our communities to mobilize around a shared vision that addresses climate change and its connection to violence against women.” Angela Marie MacDougall, Executive Director at BWSS

BWSS invites the community to join us as we honour our collective efforts, connect as a community, inspire each other, strengthen friendships and most importantly raise funds for Battered Women’s Support Services critical services and programs for girls and women.
BWSS is grateful to Cascadia for their generous support as principal sponsor of this event.

Event details:
Breaking the Silos – BWSS Fundraising Gala
Wednesday, November 25, 2015 at 6:00pm
Terminal City Club, Vancouver, Coast Salish Territories
Severn Cullis-Suzuki, Keynote Speaker
Jill Krop, MC
Tickets $100 each or $750 for a table of 8

Public enquiries and tickets:
Tickets available online http://www.eventbrite.ca/e/breaking-the-silos-tickets-18962247593
For more information please call BWSS at 778-558-7179 or email communityengagement@bwss.org

Media enquiries
Angela Marie MacDougall, Executive Director, Battered Women’s Support Services
Tel. (604) 808 0507 E-mail: director@bwss.org

About Severn Cullis-Suzuki, Activist

Severn Cullis-Suzuki is an activist for diversity – in the natural world, in human society and in cultural worldviews. She began as child, calling on leaders for intergenerational justice for her generation. In 1992, 12-year-old Canadian Severn Cullis-Suzuki spoke at the Earth Summit in Rio. With eloquence and passion, she appealed to world leaders not as politicians but as parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles, reminding them they were there not to protect Earth for the sake of economics or politics, but for those we love. Severn moved her audience to tears and shot to fame as an icon of the environmental movement. Now known as “The Girl Who Silenced the World for 6 Minutes”, the video clip of the speech is still making rounds on YouTube, continuing to inspire youth all over the world – many of whom don’t realize it’s two decades old. Today she fights for the future of her own children. A proud global citizen, her work is often on an international level; but it is rooted in Canada where she is an author and environmental communicator, and in the treeroots and salmon streams of her home province of British Columbia, where she lives on Haida Gwaii. Severn is a member of the Earth Charter International Council, host of Aboriginal People’s Television Network’s Samaqan: Water Stories, a Board Member of the David Suzuki Foundation and the Haida Gwaii Higher Education Society.

About Jill Krop, Station Manager and News Director, Global BC

Jill Krop is one of the most recognizable and trusted journalists in the province and she has recently taken on new responsibilities as the Station Manager and News Director for Global BC. I couldn’t ask for a better job or a better bunch of people to work with, says Jill Krop. Jill started her career, like a lot of fellow B.C. broadcasters, at CKPG in Prince George. Then it was onto Regina, to be the first anchor at the brand new STV. She then spent just over a year in Saskatchewan before heading east – to the Maritimes. Jill spent the next six years at ASN (the Atlantic Satellite Network) in Halifax hosting everything from major newscasts to the incredibly popular morning show, Breakfast Television. Over the years, Jill has had some amazing experiences in a number of cities, and is glad to have worked right across this Canada. She
delighted in returning to B.C. and is proud to be working at a topnotch newsroom here at Global BC. In addition to loving her job, Jill also found a new passion in travelling around the world. She is happiest when wandering the world with her backpack and a Lonely Planet travel guide. She has been to Spain, Portugal, Morocco, Australia, China, Mexico, Guatemala and Belize in the past few years and hopes to continue her travels … next destination: unknown!

About BWSS

BWSS is a feminist organization. We believe that battering does not take place between two people individually, in isolation, but in a social context, and is rooted in the oppression of women. Further, we believe that battering is the result of a world view which supports the right of some people to oppress others. That right is granted by the privilege of status associated with gender, race, religion, class, sexual orientation, age and physical ability.
Battered Women’s Support Services provides education, advocacy and support services to assist all battered women in its aim to work towards the elimination of violence and to work from a feminist perspective that promotes equality for all women. We contribute to the freedom and liberation of girls and women from violence and to empower our community through training and education programs. For over 35 years BWSS has been providing counselling and healing spaces for those who have experienced abuse. To help women build strength and resiliency, we work on systemic advocacy, law reform, in-class youth engagement programs and we operate a social enterprise called My Sister’s Closet in British Columbia. In addition, we support men by urging them to own their role in ending violence against girls and women.

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Sexual Harassment on Public Transit Is a Problem We Must Solve

PRESS RELEASE

For immediate release

November 09, 2015

Sexual Harassment on Public Transit Is a Problem We Must Solve

Vancouver, BC- On Tuesday, November  10th Battered Women’s Support Services (BWSS) is highlighting the serious social issue of violence against women on public transit through #TransitTuesday.

Movement is a part of our daily life on average one million people use public transit every day in Metro Vancouver. Sexual harassment on public transportation is an everyday occurrence for millions of girls and women living all over the world.  According to Hollaback Vancouver, 58% of women surveyed indicate they don’t feel safe on transit.

“At BWSS, we don’t believe that harassment is an unavoidable part of a woman’s daily commute.  We believe that women must be able to move about and occupy the public space without being placed in danger or threatened.  It’s a fundamental freedom. Safe public transit for women and girls is about recognizing our experiences and needs.” –Angela Marie MacDougall, Executive Director, BWSS

On #TransitTuesday, November 10, 2015, BWSS is bringing to light the issue of sexual violence on public transit. We will be at Commercial and Broadway station in the morning handing out pamphlets with more information on how, together; we can make public transit safer for women.

“For women and girls, the freedom to move through public space comes with limitations. It also negatively impacts our health and well-being. Finding solutions we can all participate in is the best way to help prevent sexual harassment on public transit” – Rona Amiri, Violence Prevention Coordinator, BWSS

Battered Women’s Support Services will share this information during the November 10th showing of NIRBHAYA at the Cultch. The play is based on the true incident of a gang rape on a bus in Delhi and how the death of this young woman affected the lives of countless individuals.

 

Media enquiries

Angela Marie MacDougall, Executive Director, Battered Women’s Support Services

Tel. (604) 808 0507 E-mail: director@bwss.org

 

About BWSS
BWSS is a feminist organization. We believe that battering does not take place between two people individually, in isolation, but in a social context, and is rooted in the oppression of women. Further, we believe that battering is the result of a world view which supports the right of some people to oppress others. That right is granted by the privilege of status associated with gender, race, religion, class, sexual orientation, age and physical ability.
Battered Women’s Support Services provides education, advocacy and support services to assist all battered women in its aim to work towards the elimination of violence and to work from a feminist perspective that promotes equality for all women. We contribute to the freedom and liberation of girls and women from violence and to empower our community through training and education programs. For over 35 years BWSS has been providing counselling and healing spaces for those who have experienced abuse. To help women build strength and resiliency, we work on systemic advocacy, law reform, in-class youth engagement programs and we operate a social enterprise called My Sister’s Closet in British Columbia. In addition, we support men by urging them to own their role in ending violence against girls and women.

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Coalition Demands Action

Coalition Demands Action on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls and Makes Preliminary Recommendations for National Inquiry

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News Release
November 9, 2015

Coalition Demands Action on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and
Girls and Makes Preliminary Recommendations for National Inquiry

(Coast Salish Territory/Vancouver, B.C. – November 9, 2015) A Coalition on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls is holding a press conference this morning to advise the public that British Columbia has failed to make significant progress on many of the recommendations from the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry (MWCI) and continues to ignore international recommendations from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR). Given their experience with the MWCI, the Coalition is making preliminary recommendations to the newly elected Trudeau Government for the National Inquiry which Prime Minister Trudeau promised would start immediately.

For decades, Indigenous women and supporting organizations called for an inquiry into the disappearances of the many marginalized women from BC. Unfortunately, the MWCI led by Wally Oppal in 2012 was a deeply and systemically flawed and frustrating process that repeated the same discrimination and exclusion which we hoped it was going to uncover.

Of the 56 MWCI recommendations aimed at BC, many are unimplemented or “in progress,” and there is no ongoing accountability from the Province on work that remains to be done. To the contrary, the Province publicly said in 2014 that they would no longer be providing any updates on the recommendations, and BC Minister of Justice Suzanne Anton advised the Coalition on May 4, 2015, that “no further action is being contemplated.” Minister Anton continues to ignore our requests for full implementation of both MWCI and IACHR recommendations, and for a genuine accountability process to oversee and evaluate change and progress.

One of the critical and outstanding recommendations from the MWCI, the Highway of Tears Symposium, and the IACHR is to create accessible transportation along the Highway of Tears (Highway 16) in Northern BC. The Coalition is absolutely appalled that the Privacy Commissioner of BC recently confirmed that the BC Government deleted emails from family and communities about the Highway of Tears instead of responding appropriately to a freedom of information request, and instead of responding to the repeated and important recommendations to address this issue.

We request that the Province review Highway of Tears transportation options with affected communities and jointly create a fully funded plan that will be announced prior to the Gathering for Family Members of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls planned for March 2016 in Prince George. We strongly emphasize the need to address the systemic issues of poverty, racism, and the inter-generational impacts of Residential Schools, leading to the alarmingly high rate of murdered and disappeared women along the Highway of Tears. We also ask the Province to provide ongoing funding for the Highway of Tears Initiative.

Importantly, the Coalition is drawing on the respective and collective experience of its member organizations and individuals to recommend that the National Inquiry promised by the newly elected Trudeau government begin by establishing a pre-inquiry consultation process. Such a process should be inclusive of Indigenous women and communities and related organizations, and should establish the mandate and parameters of the inquiry, criteria for appointments of Commissioners and staff, processes for participation, initial areas of research, and resource requirements and commitments. It will be critical to review different models of inquiries. Further, the National Inquiry must consult thoroughly at every stage with Indigenous women and communities and related organizations, a recommendation made by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights in its January 2015 report after reviewing the MWCI.

We are completely resolute that the National Inquiry cannot in any way repeat the mistakes of the BC Missing Women Commission of Inquiry. Importantly, any recommendations coming out of a National Inquiry must be accompanied by a fully funded implementation plan, which was absent from both the MWCI and the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples. We are calling on the Trudeau Government to fulfil its commitment to a National Inquiry by establishing a genuine and transparent pre-inquiry consultation so that the National Inquiry truly results in improving the safety of Indigenous women and girls, and achieves justice for those who have been murdered or disappeared.

The Coalition on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls initially came together in response to the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry in British Columbia overseen by Commissioner Wally Oppal. Unfortunately the groups who formed the Coalition were shut out of the inquiry; however, the Coalition continues to meet regularly to pursue justice for murdered and missing Indigenous women and girls and has grown in number and strength.

Background documents:

1. Summary of MWCI Recommendations and Implementation, compiled by the Coalition (Nov 5, 2015)
2. Coalition correspondence to Prime Minister Trudeau, Minister Wilson-Raybould, Minister Bennett, and Minister Hajdu regarding recommendations for National Inquiry (Nov 9, 2015)

PicMonkey Collage33

Photo courtesy of Union of BC Indian Chiefs (UBCIC)

 

For further information:

Amnesty International Canada, Craig Benjamin, (613) 744-7667, ext. 235
Atira Housing, Janice Abbott, (604) 331-1420
Battered Women’s Support Services, Angela Marie MacDougall, (604) 808-0507
BC Assembly of First Nations, Regional Chief Shane Gottfriedson, (250) 318-8527
BC Civil Liberties Association, Josh Paterson, (778) 829-8973
Butterflies in Spirit, Lorelei Williams, (778) 709-6498
Carrier Sekani Family Services, Mary Teegee, (250) 612-8710
Carrier Sekani Tribal Council, Tribal Chief Terry Teegee, (250) 640-3256
Downtown Eastside Women’s Centre, Alice Kendall, (604) 681-8480
Ending Violence Association of BC, Christina Entrekin Coad, (604) 633-2506, ext. 13
February 14th Women’s Memorial March Committee, Fay Blaney, (778) 714-0161
First Nations Summit, Colin Braker, (604) 328-4094
First United Church, Genesa Greening, (604) 681-8365
Lookout Emergency Aid Society, Shayne Williams, (604) 255-0340
Native Women’s Association of Canada
Neskonlith Indian Band, Kukpi7 Judy Wilson, (250) 319-7383
PACE: Providing Alternatives Counselling & Education Society, Laura Dilley, (604) 872-7651
PHS Community Services Society, Patrick Smith, (604) 779-6837
Pivot Legal Society, Kevin Hollett, (778) 848-3420
Poverty and Human Rights Centre, Shelagh Day, (604) 872-0750
RainCity Housing, Amelia Ridgway, (604) 662-7023
Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, (250) 490-5314
Vancouver Council of Women, Rosemary Mallory, (604) 985-0878
Vancouver Aboriginal Community Policing Centre Society, Lillian Howard, (604) 253-9575
Vancouver Rape Relief and Women’s Shelter, Keira Smith-Tague, (604) 872-8212
Union Gospel Mission, Derek Weiss, (604) 253-3323
West Coast LEAF, Kendra Milne, (604) 684-8772
WISH Drop-in Centre Society, Mebrat Beyene, (604) 669-9474
Women Against Violence Against Women, Irene Tsepnopoulous-Elhaimer, (604) 255-6228 ext 229
Ceejai Julien, family member, (778)251-0727
Beverley Jacobs, Jacobs Law, (778) 877-7402

Summary of MWCI Recommendations & Implementation
Compiled by the Coalition on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls

Sources of Information:

Forsaken (report of the MCWI), Executive Summary, November 2012
http://www.ag.gov.bc.ca/public_inquiries/docs/Forsaken-ES.pdf

VPD Administrative Report, January 2013 (Doug Lepard)
http://vancouver.ca/police/policeboard/agenda/2013/0122/1301L02.pdf

Safety and Security of Vulnerable Women in BC (BC response to MWCI recommendations), March 2014
http://www.ag.gov.bc.ca/public_inquiries/docs/BCGovStatusReport.pdf

A Final Status Update Report in Response to: Forsaken – The Report of the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry (BC response to MWCI recommendations), December 2014 http://www.ag.gov.bc.ca/public_inquiries/docs/MWCI_Report_2014.pdf

Main entities targeted by recommendations:

  • Province
  • Attorney General/Crown Prosecution Services
  • Police forces

Main themes:

  • Healing and reconciliation, including specifically for families
  • Changes to policing to increase sensitivity to and protection for vulnerable women (for example, training)
  • Changes to investigations, how charges are laid, and how victims are supported
  • Changes to missing persons policing
  • Changes to coordination between police forces

Comments:
It is difficult to assess with any accuracy how far the Province’s actions go in responding to the MWCI recommendations. Forsaken recommended appointing an independent champion to steward the process of change after the MWCI closed. With the resignation of the Honourable Steven Point, there has been no one to fulfill this crucial oversight role. Many projects are described by the Province as “ongoing” or “in progress,” but with no further report from the Province anticipated, there is no accountability mechanism to measure the success of their implementation.
At least some of the achievements reported on by the Province as satisfying the MWCI recommendations are actually the work of other programs, some of them predating the MWCI.

Of the projects that have been undertaken directly in response to MWCI, some are clearly not in keeping with the spirit of the original recommendations. As an example, a number of the recommendations concerned cultural competency training for police and service providers, conducted by experiential people and members of Indigenous communities, as a means of building understanding between police and community members. The Province has responded to this by extending the use of an online tool, originally developed for health care providers, for use by others. This is not a satisfactory response to the communities that are owed bias-free policing. Not surprisingly, members of these communities complain that little has changed in their relations with police forces.

The Provinces’ response to Urgent Measure #2 concerning Highway of Tears deserves special mention. While the Province has claimed that its work there is ongoing, that “work” has amounted to the creation of a website and a small grant for driver’s education training. In the meantime, not only is there no evidence of progress on an improved transportation system on Highway 16, critical emails about consultations with communities have been destroyed.
These responses are unacceptable and reinforce the conviction that the Province is not truly committed to work to ensure the safety and uphold the dignity of Indigenous women and girls.

Note: The VPD expressed its support for the vast majority of recommendations directed specifically at police; however, in many cases, it is not clear whether these recommendations have been actively implemented.

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RE: Coalition on MMIWG Recommendations for National Inquiry

Dear Prime Minister Trudeau and Ministers:
We extend our sincere congratulations on your election and appointments to a new Cabinet. We thank you for your campaign commitments to advance justice and equality and to set a new relationship between Canada and Indigenous peoples. We write today about your promise to establish a national public inquiry on murders and disappearances of Indigenous women and girls, which is a crucial step towards creating a just society for Indigenous women and girls, their families and communities.

The Coalition on Missing and Murdered Women formed when the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry was appointed in British Columbia in 2010, although many of the members of the Coalition, such as the February 14th Memorial March, have been working to bring public attention to the murders and disappearances of Indigenous women and girls for more than 25 years. The Coalition is comprised of front-line women’s organizations, Indigenous organizations and human rights organizations, which all have established expertise and experience working with Indigenous women and their families on the issues surrounding the crisis of violence against Indigenous women and girls.

We write today with a specific request with respect to the implementation of your commitment to a national inquiry: a pre-inquiry consultation process must be established in order to ensure that the inquiry is designed, in advance, in a way that will allow it to successfully meet its goals and improve safety for Indigenous women and girls in Canada. In particular, this pre-inquiry consultation process should establish the mandate and parameters of the inquiry, criteria for appointments of Commissioners and staff, processes for participation, initial areas of research, and resource requirements and commitments.

We stress the importance of pre-inquiry consultation because we have learned from the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry in BC, which was a dismal failure. The mandate of the BC inquiry was too narrow to address the root causes of the problem before it. In addition, the BC inquiry process effectively excluded key organizations, such as the Native Women’s Association of Canada, who could speak to the lives and deaths of the women it was ostensibly designed to consider, as well as Indigenous and civil society organizations with crucial expertise about the root causes of violence against Indigenous women and girls and its real effects on families and communities. The families of the women who were murdered by Robert William Pickton received only token representation and support, and many families felt left out of any meaningful participation in the process.

The failure of the BC inquiry and the necessity for meaningful pre-inquiry planning are well established. Some members of the Coalition wrote a report after this dismaying experience, entitled Blueprint for an Inquiry: Learning from the Failures of the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry,1 which sets out a number of necessary considerations for future inquiries and states:
If there were only one recommendation to come from this report, it would be that commissions of inquiry that are called in response to the concerns of marginalized communities, must consult thoroughly at every stage with those communities and the organizations that work with those communities.

In addition, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights issued a report in January 2015 entitled Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in British Columbia, Canada,2 which reviewed the work of BC’s Missing Women Commission of Inquiry. The report stressed the importance of consulting with Indigenous women and communities, noting “[t]heir consultation is crucial for the success of any initiative, especially given the context of historical and structural discrimination.” The Inter-American Commission also supported a national public inquiry with the caveat that Indigenous women must be consulted “at all stages from conception, to establishing terms of reference, implementation and evaluation.”

1 Available online at: http://www.westcoastleaf.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/2012-REPORT-Missing-Women-Commission-of-Inquiry.pdf.
2 Available online at: http://www.oas.org/en/iachr/reports/pdfs/indigenous-women-bc-canada-en.pdf.

In summary, we request that your government immediately establish a pre-inquiry process that includes consultation with Indigenous women, families, Indigenous organizations and civil society organizations with knowledge and expertise regarding the elements and procedures that will be necessary to make a national public inquiry effective and meaningful. We enclose a copy of the Blueprint for an Inquiry report, which contains lessons from BC’s inquiry process. Your commitment to a national inquiry is a crucial step towards improving the safety and security of Indigenous women and girls in Canada, and we urge you to take proactive steps to avoid repeating BC’s past mistakes.

We would also like to be included in this pre-inquiry consultation process, and to offer you any and all assistance in this important endeavour. This issue is close to our hearts and is very important to our collective work in seeking justice for murdered and disappeared Indigenous women and girls. Please contact Andrea Glickman, Union of BC Indian Chiefs (andrea@ubcic.bc.ca) to set up a meeting.

Sincerely,

Amnesty International Canada
Atira Housing
Battered Women’s Support Services
BC Assembly of First Nations
BC Civil Liberties Association
Butterflies in Spirit
Carrier Sekani Family Services
Carrier Sekani Tribal Council
Downtown Eastside Women’s Centre
Ending Violence Association of BC
February 14th Women’s Memorial March Committee
First Nations Summit
First United Church
Lookout Emergency Aid Society
Native Women’s Association of Canada
Neskonlith Indian Band
PACE: Providing Alternatives Counselling & Education Society
PHS Community Services Society
Pivot Legal Society
Poverty and Human Rights Centre
RainCity Housing
Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs
Vancouver Council of Women
Vancouver Aboriginal Community Policing Centre Society
Vancouver Rape Relief and Women’s Shelter
Union Gospel Mission
West Coast LEAF
WISH Drop-in Centre Society
Women Against Violence Against Women

Coalition Demands Action

MEDIA ADVISORY OF PRESS CONFERENCE: Coalition Demands Action on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls and Makes Recommendations for National Inquiry

WHAT :       Press Conference

WHEN:      Monday November 9th at 10:00 a.m.

WHERE:   342 Water Street, 5th floor, Vancouver (Union of BC Indian Chiefs boardroom)

Speakers include:

• Lorelei Williams, Family Member, Butterflies in Spirit

• Brenda Wilson, Family Member and Highway of Tears Initiative Coordinator for Carrier Sekani Family Services

• Fay Blaney, Co-Chair, February 14th Women’s Memorial March Committee

• Kendra Milne, West Coast LEAF

• Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, Union of BC Indian Chiefs

On Monday November 9th at 10:00 a.m., a Coalition on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls will host a press conference in Vancouver to comment on the Province of BC’s failure to implement recommendations from the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry, and to make recommendations for the National Inquiry committed to by the newly elected Trudeau Government. The Coalition includes family members and more than 35 advocacy and support organizations working in the Downtown Eastside Vancouver, along the Highway 16 and throughout Canada.

For more information contact:
Andrea Glickman, Union of BC Indian Chiefs, 604-842-2977

The Coalition on Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women and Girls initially came together in response to the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry in British Columbia overseen by Commissioner Wally Oppal. Unfortunately the groups who formed the Coalition were shut out of the inquiry; however, the Coalition continues to meet regularly to pursue justice for murdered and missing Indigenous women and girls and has grown in number and strength.

Prime Minister Trudeau Appoints Cabinet

Battered Women’s Support Services Hopeful As Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Appoints His Cabinet

PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release

November 4, 2015

BATTERED WOMEN’S SUPPORT SERVICES HOPEFUL AS PRIME MINISTER

JUSTIN TRUDEAU APPOINTS HIS CABINET

We are hopeful on this historic day to see Gender Parity in the new federal cabinet appointed by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.   We agree with the Prime Minister that it is 2015 and gender parity in Canadian parliament signifies an opportunity to redress systemic discrimination in Canada.

We commend Prime Minister Trudeau for appointing such a strong and diverse Cabinet and for recognizing the importance of having women’s voices at the Cabinet table. Today’s federal Cabinet appointments represent much potential and opportunities for the women of Canada.

We would like to congratulate all newly appointed Cabinet Ministers to the Federal Government, and in particular, former BC Regional Chief Puglaas, Jody Wilson-Raybould in the role as Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada. Puglaas has been and continues to be a strong voice for women’s issues and violence against women.

 
We cannot talk about violence against women without speaking to the national shame of disappearances and murders of Indigenous women and girls. We have appreciated walking with Puglaas during the Women’s Memorial March held every February 14th in Downtown Eastside Vancouver, British Columbia to draw our collective voices around the need for a national inquiry.

We are recognized by the International community and through the observations and recommendations tabled through the United Nations Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples providing a benchmark on the status of women in Canada.

As Canada moves toward holding a national inquiry to address Missing and Murdered Indigenous women and girls we are reminded that many recommendations from the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples have not been enacted and are sitting collecting dust.  We are painfully aware of Canada’s recent history of Residential Schools and the 94 Recommendations growing from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

The significance of the Trudeau government swearing in ceremony beginning with an acknowledgement of traditional Algonquin territory was not lost on us. This is unprecedented action and we remain hopeful that this is yet another opportunity to move change forward for the benefit of all.

As much change as we have seen in the recent years, the grim reality remains, that every six days a woman in Canada is killed by her intimate partner. We are hopeful that this day is the beginning of the end of violence against women and girls in Canada, and that Prime Minister Trudeau’s government will take meaningful and proactive steps in ensuring a future free from violence and oppression for our daughters and granddaughters.

 

For more information or to schedule an interview:

Angela Marie MacDougall

Executive Director, Battered Women’s Support Services

Tel. (604) 808 0507

E-mail: director@bwss.org

 
About BWSS
BWSS is a feminist organization. We believe that battering does not take place between two people individually, in isolation, but in a social context, and is rooted in the oppression of women. Further, we believe that battering is the result of a world view which supports the right of some people to oppress others. That right is granted by the privilege of status associated with gender, race, religion, class, sexual orientation, age and physical ability.
Battered Women’s Support Services provides education, advocacy and support services to assist all battered women in its aim to work towards the elimination of violence and to work from a feminist perspective that promotes equality for all women. We contribute to the freedom and liberation of girls and women from violence and to empower our community through training and education programs. For over 35 years BWSS has been providing counselling and healing spaces for those who have experienced abuse. To help women build strength and resiliency, we work on systemic advocacy, law reform, in-class youth engagement programs and we operate a social enterprise called My Sister’s Closet in British Columbia. In addition, we support men by urging them to own their role in ending violence against girls and women.

 

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