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Indigenous

Ontario pledges $100 million to help end violence against indigenous women

Ontario will spend $100 million over the next three years on a long-term strategy to end violence against indigenous women.

Premier Wynne says indigenous women three times more likely to face violence

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne says the province will fund Walking Together, a strategy to help end violence against indigenous women. (CBC)

Ontario will spend $100 million over the next threeyears on a long-term strategy to end violence against indigenouswomen, most of it on support for families.

Indigenous women are three times more likely to experienceviolence and to be murdered than other women in Ontario, PremierKathleen Wynne saidTuesday.

"This is devastating families and entire communities, and it's aproblem our entire province needs to face," Wynne said.

Indigenous people make up 2.4 per cent of Ontario's population,but they account for 26 per cent of the children in care. Indigenouswomen make up six per cent of the province's homicide victims.

"Behind these grim statistics lies violence," said Wynne."Behind these grim statistics lie the heartbreaking stories ofmothers, sisters, daughters, aunts and grandmothers that we'velost."

For decades, governments across Canada "shamefully" neglectedthe deep wounds inflicted upon indigenous communities, added Wynne.

"An entire society looked the other way, or worse, shrugged ourshoulders as too many First Nations, Mtis and Inuit women continuedto experience violence, go missing or be murdered," she said.

The provincial strategy, called Walking Together, is part of theLiberal government's broader action plan to end sexual violence andharassment.

It will include $80 million for a family well-being program tosupport indigenous families in crisis and help communities deal withthe effects of inter-generational violence and trauma.

Sylvia Maracle of the Ontario Federation of Indigenous FriendshipCentres said the provincial strategy has all the parties rowing inthe same direction.

"We're going to leave a different legacy for our children andour grandchildren," she said. "There will be space to talk, toheal, to remember and to develop their indigenous identity, and forthat we are grateful."

We're going to leave a different legacy for our children andour grandchildren.-SylviaMaracle,Ontario Federation of Indigenous FriendshipCentres

There will also be $15.75 million to ensure indigenous women andcommunities have effective support when dealing with the justicesystem and to help develop a survivor-oriented plan to prevent humantrafficking.

Another $2.32 million will be used to help police investigatemissing person cases, improve training for police and Crownattorneys and provide new tools for First Nations police forces.

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath welcomed the initiatives, but said she also wants action to address some systemic issues in First Nations communities, including drinking water, education and poverty.

"When you have a situation where populations are hopeless, then I'm sure it creates circumstances that lead to more violence," said Horwath.

Progressive Conservative women's critic Laurie Scott who has a bill before the legislature to combat human trafficking said she hoped the government's efforts to help First Nations' women would be expanded to all potential victims.

"This is money targeted towards indigenous women, which is great, a first step," said Scott. "I'm just hoping the government continues and puts forward a human trafficking strategy for the province."

The provincial strategy also incorporates a number of the Calls to Action from the national Truth and Reconciliation Commission, including mandatory indigenous cultural competency and anti-racism training for all civil servants.

"(It) is a step toward creating dialogue and building more positive relationships between Ontario and its indigenous peoples," said Metis president Gary Lipinski.

It'll take some time to organize a national inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women and girls, so Ontario will move forward in the interim, said Wynne, who will attend a roundtable on the issue in Winnipeg this week.

"The work that's been done in Ontario has informed thediscussion in terms of where we might go at that national level,"she said. "What happens next after the work that we've just laidout as this strategy, I hope, will be dovetailed at the nationallevel, but it's not going to stop us doing what needs to be done inOntario."