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IndigenousVideo

More Quebec Indigenous women break their silence about police abuse

As an investigation into alleged physical and sexual abuse of Aboriginal women at the hands of police in Val d'Or expands, more Aboriginal women have come forward with allegations of abuse involving Sret du Qubec officers in communities across the province.

Women from Maniwaki, Sept-les and Schefferville came forward after CBC broke story in October 2015

Lise Jourdain says she was raped by a provincial police officer in Schefferville 25 years ago. (Radio-Canada)

As an investigation into alleged physical and sexual abuse of Aboriginal women at the hands of police in Val d'Or expands,more Aboriginal women have come forward with similar allegations of abuse involving SretduQubec officers in communities across theprovince.

The allegationscome in the wake of an investigative report fromRadio-Canada'sEnqutethat first aired in October2015. The show reported allegations that Quebec provincialpolice officers have physically and sexually abused Aboriginal women in Val-d'Orfor decades.

Since the original broadcast, Montreal police were assigned to handle the investigation of eight SQ officers in Val-d'Or, about 520 kilometres northwest of the city.Two of those officers have since been cleared of wrongdoing.Police won't say how many women have reported abuse.

Women in Maniwaki, Sept-lesand Schefferville have added their voices to those in the original report.

They make allegations of rape, physical abuseand starlight tours. Some also spoke ofdifficulties they had trying to file complaints.

Kristen Wawatie, originally from Lac Barrire, Que., told Enqute an officer in Val-d'Orsexually assaultedher in August 2012.

"I said, 'No, I don't want you to touch me,'" she said. "It's then that his hands went, they went in my pants. He said to me that he can touch mewherehe wanted."

Wawatie said she told the officer she would bring him to court.

"He said, 'Who are they going to believe, the police or a drunkard?'"

Quebec Public Security Minister MartinCoiteux and the province have also responded to the scandal, creating a hotline for women who want to report a complaint against police. They also have the option of speaking with an Aboriginal paralegal group that isn't linked to the police investigation.

Some people familiar with the issue doubt the Montreal police investigation will get very far.

"My first reaction was that they'll all make sure that this'll get smothered, it won't go any further," said retired SQ officer Jean O'Bomsawin.

Marc Alain, former research director at the Quebec Police Institute, said it's "absolutely unbelievable" that after all the attention the Val d'Or scandal received in the media, SretduQubec leader Martin Prud'homme never publicly vowed to tacklethe root of the problem.

Isabelle Parent, who worked at the Ministry of Public Security for more than 12 years and whose job it was to inspect police forces across Quebec, said charges are rare in cases where a police force investigates another.

"Many times, when it gets to the level of the prosecutors, they'll say they don't have all the information needed to bring it to court," Parent said."So, in the end, there are many levels where it can get dropped so it doesn't get followed through."

Since the investigation started,Public Security Minister Coiteuxhas ordered police training reform and an immediate halt to what are known as starlight tours.Also known in Quebec as a "geographic cure," a starlight tour involves police driving someone who is intoxicated far from town and ditching him or her in the middle of nowhere. The targets are often Aboriginal people.

In the1990s, the practice was linked to three separate deaths ofAboriginal men near Saskatoon. Their bodies were found frozen by theside of the road on the outskirts of town.Two police officers and a police chief were later fired, and two moreofficers were sentenced to eight months in prison for unlawful confinement.

The Quebec provincial police force has refused all interview requests, as have Montreal police as they continue to investigate.

With files from Sarah Leavitt