Queen Victoria statue beheaded by protesters can't be repaired, Manitoba government says - Action News
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Manitoba

Queen Victoria statue beheaded by protesters can't be repaired, Manitoba government says

A statue of Queen Victoria that was toppled by protesters outside the Manitoba legislature on Canada Day last year is beyond repair and will not be restored.

Smaller statue of Queen Elizabeth II, also damaged on Canada Day last year, will be put back in place

A statue of a sitting woman, with its head removed, lies on its back next to the pedestal it had been standing on. The pedestal and statue are covered in red handprints.
The statues of Queen Victoria and Queen Elizabeth II on the Manitoba legislature grounds were toppled on Canada Day during demonstrations concerning Indigenous children who died at residential schools. The Victoria statue will not be repaired, while the Elizabeth one will be. (Kelly Geraldine Malone/The Canadian Press)

A statue of Queen Victoria that was toppled and beheaded by protesters last year outside the Manitoba legislature is beyond repair and will not be restored.

"It's gone through a lengthy assessment process and is not repairable," Justice Minister Kelvin Goertzen said in an interview.

Trying to replicate it is also out of the question, Goertzen said, because it would cost at least $500,000.

"I know it will be disappointing to many people it won't be recast but that's the decision."

The statue, a prominent monument on the front lawn of the legislature, was tied with ropes and hauled to the ground on Canada Day last year during a demonstration over the deaths of Indigenous children at residential schools. It was covered with red paint. The head of the large statue was removed and found the next day in the nearby Assiniboine River.

The head of a statue is seen in a river, just part of the forehead and nose and cheekbone sticking above the surface.
The head of the Queen Victoria statue that used to stand outside the Manitoba Legislature was thrown in the Assiniboine River after Canada Day. That statue would cost $500,000 to recast, so the province is opting to not put it back up. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

While the statue was toppled in an area covered by many security cameras, no one was charged with causing the damage.

A smaller statue, on a side lawn next to the lieutenant-governor's house, was also toppled but suffered less damage. That one of Queen Elizabeth II is being repaired and will be put back in place, Goertzen said.

Discussions with Indigenous groups are ongoing about what might replace the Queen Victoria statue, he added.

There is no word yet on what is to become of the broken Queen Victoria statue. In online discussion forums, some people have suggested the statue be installed in a museum as-is to commemorate last year's protest.

The decision to not restore or replicate the statue comes amid a public debate over how to mark Canada Day this year, at a time when the country is still coming to grips with the legacy of residential schools. Winnipeg is home to the highest concentration of Indigenous people among major cities in Canada.

Organizers of the city's big annual Canada Day celebrations at The Forks the downtown junction of the Red and Assiniboine rivers have renamed the event this year "A New Day," cancelled fireworks and promised events that will be reflective as well as celebratory.

That has led to accusations that organizers have cancelled Canada Day, which they deny. Jenny Motkaluk, a candidate for the city's mayoral election in October who finished second in the last race in 2018, blasted the decision and said she would go elsewhere because she loves the country unconditionally.

Other mayoral candidates are supporting the renamed event and have said acknowledging the country's history, including its flaws, is important.

Wab Kinew, Manitoba's Opposition NDP leader, said there are ways to mark the holiday while acknowledging the wrongs.

"I think it could mean things like marking Canada Day, attending a Canada Day celebration, but wearing an orange shirt in honour of the (residential school) survivors," Kinew said.

"I am a patriot, but I'm a patriot who is also the son of a residential school survivor, and my dad shared a bunk with a child who never came home from that residential school."