"Last week, the Manitoba government announced the creation of a joint RCMP and Winnipeg Police task force to investigate dozens of cases of missing and murdered women in the province.
The news, while welcome, raises the question: Why limit the investigation to Manitoba?
It is true that there are at least 75 missing women in the province, virtually all of them aboriginal. Police have been seemingly incapable of solving the cases and halting the race-based violence.
But, nationwide, the data are even more gut-wrenching: The Native Women's Association of Canada has catalogued 520 cases of missing or murdered aboriginal women, half of them since the year 2000.
The women, most under the age of 30, are overwhelmingly victims of sexual violence. They are being preyed upon systematically by sexual sadists, killers and probably more than one serial killer.
How can this not be considered a national priority for police, justice and public-health officials?"
Get the Story:
Andre Picard: With more than 500 aboriginal women missing, action is overdue
(The Globe and Mail 9/3)
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Task force launched after deaths of Native girls
(8/27)
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