Call to search landfill for remains started in Winnipeg. Now, it's coming from across the country - Action News
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Manitoba

Call to search landfill for remains started in Winnipeg. Now, it's coming from across the country

More voices are joining the call to search a Winnipeg-area landfill for the remains of two homicide victims.

Finding the bodies of 2 Indigenous women is the issue of our times, professor says

Two side-by-side photos. One has a garbage can with a yellow rectangle sticker on it that says search the landfills. The other has an image of a red female symbol and garbage bin next to each other, encircled and crossed out.
Artist Raven Davis created decals that appear on trash cans across Winnipeg in the hopes of helping people understand why the remains of two murdered women should be recovered. (Travis Golby/CBC)

More than two dozen people roared down the highway from Saskatchewan to Manitoba Wednesday morning to lend their voices to the growing callfrom across the country to search a Winnipeg-area landfill for the remains of two homicide victims.

Eleanore Sunchild says she's among those travelling with the Redrum Motorcycle Club, an Indigenous group travelling from Saskatoon to Regina, where she saidas many 30 people on bikes and in vehicles willhead to Winnipeg's city-run Brady Road landfill, where Camp Morgan has been stationed since December.

The camp is named after 39-year-old Morgan Harriswhose remains, along with those of26-year-old Marcedes Myran, arebelievedto be in the privately run Prairie Green landfill just north of Winnipeg after the womenwere allegedly killed by the same man last year.

Camp Morgan was set up after Winnipeg Police said theyconcludedHarris and Myran's remains arein the landfill, but it would not be feasible to search for them. That decision led to a protest movementthat has since spread far beyond the local Indigenous voices that sparked it. Itintensified last monthafter the Manitoba government announced it would not support a search.

While the federal government has yet to commit to funding a landfill search, newly minted Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Gary Anandasangaree on Wednesday called the issue "heart-wrenching" and vowed to find a solution the families "feel is just and appropriate."

WATCH | Supporters arrive in Winnipeg:

Support from across Canada arrives in Manitoba to call for landfill search

1 year ago
Duration 2:06
More than a dozen motorcycle riders and cars from Saskatchewan made the trek to Brady Road landfill in Winnipeg on Tuesday, July 26, 2023. The group is joining the call to search a different landfill outside the city for the remains of Morgan Harris and Marcedes Myran.

Sunchild, a lawyer from Thunderchild First Nation in Saskatchewan, said while Harris and Myran are believed to have been killed in Winnipeg, their deaths speak to the larger issue of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, which affects every community across Canada.

"Those are Indigenous women who come from communities and families, who are loved, and they should be treated with as much respect as any other person," she said over the phone during the journey to Winnipeg.

A woman with red sunglasses with her hair pulled back into a ponytail takes a selfie with a serious face.
Eleanore Sunchild, a lawyer from Thunderchild First Nation in Saskatchewan, says the deaths of Morgan Harris and Marcedes Myran in Winnipeg speak to the larger issue of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls across Canada. (Submitted by Eleanore Sunchild)

The #SearchTheLandfill movement has also gotten attention from prominent figures including Inuk singer and writer Tanya Tagaq and actor Mark Ruffalo. Use of the hashtag spiked in mid-Julyto a reach of more than four million people, data from a social media intelligence tool shows.

For Jorden Myran, seeing the calls to search for her sister's remains grow so dramatically in recent weeks has been moving, as people from across the country learn more about her family's story.

"People are seeing that and realizing what's going on and we're having a lot more people stand with us and be behind us on this," she said Tuesday at Camp Marcedes, a second encampment named after her sister that was recently set up outside the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg.

Protesters and relatives say they want the women's remains so they can give them a properburial.

'The issue of our times'

As people from across Canada wait to see whether governments will support a search for Harris and Myran's remains, the issue has become an opportunity for a national moment of reconciliation, one Indigenous studies professor says.

"This is the issue of our times right now," said Jacqueline Romanow, a Mtis associate professor in the University of Winnipeg's Indigenous studies department.

"This could be a moment where everyone gets together and basically proves that things have changed."

A woman with beaded earrings and pigtals looks serious as she talks to someone off-camera in a treed area.
Indigenous studies professor Jacqueline Romanow says the call for a landfill search in Manitoba is 'the issue of our times' right now. (Justin Fraser/CBC)

Decals covering public trash cans across parts of Winnipeg also show just how far the movement has reached, after it caught the attention of an Anishinaabe artist based in Halifax and Toronto.

Raven Davis, who recently completed a residency at the Plug In Institute of Contemporary Art in downtown Winnipeg, said they used that opportunity to create a public art installation that would draw attention to the calls for a landfill search.

"It's just trying to garner compassion. We are in a very turbulent time where we're not seeing each other as humans," Davis said in a Zoom interview, adding they also created a Camp Marcedes sign at the encampment.

"The fact that these families are having to protest during a time of grief immense, profound grief is atrocious."

Support from across the Prairies

At a gathering in Winnipeg this week of members of the numbered treaties, Chief Elwood Zastre of Wuskwi Sipihk First Nation in Manitoba said the government's inaction on searching for Harris and Myran's remains has caught the attention of his community and he wasn't the only one.

Kelsey Jacko, chief of Cold Lake First Nations in Alberta, said he took the opportunity while in Winnipeg to visit Camp Morgan at the Brady Road landfill.

A man wearing sunglasses and a Treaty 6 T-shirt with his hair pulled back faces the camera.
Kelsey Jacko, chief of Cold Lake First Nations in Alberta, says he recently visited Winnipeg's Brady Road landfill while in the city to show his support for a search. (Justin Fraser/CBC)

"I felt I had to go there," Jacko said."The family deserves closure and I thought I'd be there to show support."

Shelby Horseman, chief executive officer of Horse Lake First Nation in Alberta, said it was "devastating" to hear Myran's family tell their story as she laid down tobacco at Camp Marcedes recently. It's an issue discussed in hercommunity and beyond.

"It's not only just my community in Alberta, it's everybody who's First Nations. It's kind of a problem that we all suffer," Horseman said.

"It's unfortunate that it keeps happening. Our voices need to be spoken and heard just as much as anybody else."

Call to search landfill for remains coming from across the country

1 year ago
Duration 2:20
More than two dozen people roared down the highway from Saskatchewan to Manitoba Wednesday morning to lend their voices to the growing call from across the country to search a Winnipeg-area landfill for the remains of two homicide victims.

With files from Josh Crabb