Overincarceration of Indigenous peoples nothing short of genocide
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Canada’s
colonial objectives have always been to clear the lands for settlement and
development by whatever means necessary.
After
signing peace treaties in the 1700s, clearing the lands meant laws offering
bounties on the heads of Mi’kmaw men, women and children. In the 1800s,
clearing the lands meant ethnic cleansing on the Prairies - laws, policies and
practices that confined native peoples to reserves
and
gave them insufficient rations to survive. In the 1900s, clearing the lands
meant the theft of thousands of native children to be forced into residential
schools where thousands died from abuse, torture and starvation. In the 2000s
clearing the lands means the mass incarceration of Indigenous peoples in
prisons paving the way for the extractive industry.
The
overincarceration of Indigenous peoples in federal, provincial and territorial
prisons in Canada today is nothing short of genocide.
On
Jan. 21, 2020, Dr. Ivan Zinger, who heads the Office of the Correctional
Investigator, issued an urgent statement about the rates of Indigenous peoples
in federal prisons being at historic highs. While Indigenous peoples only make
up five per cent of the Canadian population, they represent more than 30 per
cent of those in federal prisons. Those statistics are even worse for
Indigenous women who now make up 42 per cent of the prison population. A
Statistics Canada report released in 2018 shows that almost half of all youth
in corrections are Indigenous as well. This is all happening at a time when
incarceration rates for the rest of Canada continue to decline. Why is this
happening? Zinger states that federal corrections is “impervious to change” - a
well-founded conclusion given the decades of commissions, inquiries and reports
highlighting both racism in the justice system and the devastating impact it
has on Indigenous peoples.
In
1989, Chief Justice Thomas Hickman issued the final report of the Royal
Commission on the Donald
Marshall, Jr., Prosecution (Marshall Inquiry). Donald Marshall was a Mi’kmaw
man from Nova Scotia who had been wrongly targeted by police and convicted of murder,
spending 11 years in prison. The Marshall Inquiry found that the criminal
justice system had failed Marshall “at virtually every turn” due “to the fact
that Donald Marshall Jr., is a Native.” The report provided numerous recommendations to ensure more equitable treatment of native peoples in the
future.
A
decade later, the Aboriginal Justice Inquiry of Manitoba released its report in
relation to the
murder
of Helen Betty Osborne whose assailants had not been brought to justice; and
John Joseph
Harper, an unarmed native politician shot dead by Winnipeg police. Murray
Sinclair, co-commissioner for the justice inquiry and chair of the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission, made similar findings to the Marshall Inquiry: “[t]he justice
system has failed Manitoba’s Aboriginal people on a massive scale.” His report
also made numerous recommendations in relation to addressing racism and
discrimination against Indigenous peoples in the justice system and beyond.
In
2004, the Saskatchewan Commission on First Nations and Metis Peoples and
Justice Reform found
that racism was a major issue in police forces in their dealings with native
peoples. This came on the heels of the Commission of Inquiry into Matters
Relating to the Death of Neil Stonechild,
also in 2004. This was an inquiry that investigated “Starlight Tours,” the
arbitrary detention
of native peoples by police who are driven out of town to freeze to death at
night. Both reports
offered recommendations, but like the other reports, most were largely ignored.
In
2007 came the Ipperwash Inquiry in Ontario and most recently, in 2019 came the
Final Report of
the National Inquiry into Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women and Girls,
which found Canada guilty of both historic and ongoing genocide. Racism in the justice system is a
common theme
in all of these reports and the Office of the Correctional Investigator has
been raising the alarm
for the overincarceration of Indigenous people for two decades.
The
statistics clearly show a steady rise in Indigenous incarceration from 17.5 per
cent in 2000 to 30 per cent in 2020. But these represent the national statistics and, like rates
of murdered and missing
Indigenous women and girls, and Indigenous children in foster care, the
provincial rates can
be double the national rates.
In
Manitoba, more than 80 per cent of prisoners are Indigenous — the same province
where 50 per cent of all women murdered and missing are Indigenous and 90 per cent of all
children in foster
care are Indigenous. In Saskatchewan, 76 per cent of prisoners were Indigenous,
the same province
which has more than 55 per cent of women murdered and missing as Indigenous and
85 per
cent of children in foster care are Indigenous. We also know that more than
two-thirds of Indigenous
prisoners have been impacted by the foster care system. This is exactly the
kind of colonial
legacy that the Supreme Court of Canada in R. v. Gladue [1999] 1 S.C.R. 688 and
R. v. Ipeelee
2012 SCC 13 cases meant to address when they instructed judges to find
alternatives to prison
for Indigenous peoples. Is no one listening?
From
the evidence, it is clear we have a direct pipeline from foster care to prison
that seems to clear
the way for pipelines on native territories. What the statistics don’t show is
the history of thenRCMP and other police forces as an integral part of colonial
settlement and development policies that have created this current crisis.
From
the RCMP’s Project Sitka to its massive military-style operation on
Wet’suwet’en territory right
now, native lands continue to be cleared by Canada’s laws, policies, practices,
actions and omissions.
The overincarceration rates will continue to increase unless we address these
genocidal policies once and for all.
While
I agree with Zinger’s call for “bold and urgent action,” cultural programming
and Indigenizing
the prison will not get us there. We must confront racism against Indigenous
peoples head on and prevent incarceration in the first place. This means
addressing racism in federal and provincial laws and policies, as well as
rampant racism in policing. In the meantime, we must begin the urgent process
of decarceration for Indigenous women and children; Indigenous peoples with
mental health issues; and Indigenous men languishing in prisons for little more
than navigating poverty.
This
article was originally published by The Lawyer’s Daily
(www.thelawyersdaily.ca), part of LexisNexis Canada Inc on January 30, 2020. https://www.thelawyersdaily.ca/articles/17658
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