‘It is urgent:’ Commissioner calls for Indigenous bodies to oversee police
Aboriginal civilian groups that would oversee police actions are long past due in Canada, says a commissioner who served on the inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.
Michele Audette says it’s been obvious for decades that the way police are held accountable is failing Indigenous people and other communities of colour.
“It is urgent, very urgent, that we have a civilian body,” Audette said in an interview with The Canadian Press from Montreal.
For three years, Audette listened to testimony from Indigenous families and experts. She recalls stories about crime victims not being supported or families not taken seriously when a loved one disappeared. Some spoke about not knowing where to turn if they alleged police were the perpetrators of harm.