Manitoba failing to protect lives of Indigenous women, girls, advocate says - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba failing to protect lives of Indigenous women, girls, advocate says

Someactivists say Manitoba has done little to protect the lives of Indigenous women and girlsin Manitoba since the National Inquiry into Missingand Murdered Indigenous Women released its recommendations four years ago.

Hilda Anderson-Pyrz wants Brady Road landfill turned into memorial site

A woman with long dark hair wears bold, black-framed glasses and beaded earrings. She looks at the camera as other people stand in the background.
Hilda Anderson-Pyrz says there needs to be action, not just talk of commitment, to the 231 calls for justice that came out of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls. (Randall McKenzie/CBC)

Manitoba has done little to protect the lives of Indigenous women and girlsin Manitoba since the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls released its recommendations four years ago, some activists say.

A woman's body was recovered from Winnipeg's landfill onMonday the second in 10 months, withmore believed to be buried.

"Visualize that, if that was your loved one in the Brady landfill and garbage was continuously being dumped on their remains," saidHilda Anderson-Pyrz, chair of theNational Family and Survivors Circle.

"What does that tell you?It tells you the lack of respect for the lives of Indigenous women, girls and two-spirit, gender-diverse people."

A woman in a black t-shirt sits on a rainbow-coloured blanket draped over a brown couch.
Linda Mary Beardy, 33, was found dead in Winnipeg's Brady Road landfill on Monday. (Submitted by Melissa Roulette)

The landfill is currently closed as police continue to investigate after33-year-old Linda Beardy's body was discovered at the beginning of the week.

Anderson-Pyrzdoesn't believe it should ever reopenas a landfill.

"It should be turned into a memorial site because we know that there is more," she told CBC Manitoba Information Radio host Marcy Markusaon Thursday.

The partial remains of Rebecca Contois were discovered there in June 2022.

Jeremy Skibicki has been charged with first-degree murder in her death and the deaths of three other women Morgan Harris, 39, Marcedes Myran, 26, and one who is yet to be identified. The bodies of those three women haven't been found, though Winnipeg police have said they believe the remains of Harris and Myran are at the privately owned Prairie Green landfill north of Winnipeg.

The faces of three First Nations women are pictured side by side.
Left to right: Morgan Beatrice Harris, Marcedes Myran and Rebecca Contois. (Submitted by Cambria Harris, Donna Bartlett and Darryl Contois)

Police have not yet determinedthe location of the remains of the fourth victim, whom community members have named Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe, or Buffalo Woman.

A feasibility studyto determine whether it's possible to search and recover human remains from Prairie Greenis expected in about four to sixweeks.

Premier Heather Stefanson, who also spoke to Markusaon Thursday, was asked if she would commit to a similar study at Brady.

"I'm not ruling out anything," she said, but she is waiting until the investigations are complete, and then"we'll have those discussions going forward with various officials."

A Winnipeg police car was seen behind barricades set up by Brady Landfill in Winnipeg on Tuesday.
A police car sits behind barricades blocking access to the Brady Road landfill in Winnipeg on Tuesday. (Megan Goddard/Radio-Canada)

Stefansonalso saidher government is committed to implementing the 231 calls for justicethat came out of theNational MMIWG inquiry, pointing to the recentcreation of the Manitoba Integrated Missing Persons Response, a hub to manage all reports of missing people in the province.

She also mentioned funding provided to the Clan Mothers Healing Village and Knowledge Centre north of Winnipeg.

Asked what she would commit to next, Stefanson said the province will continue working with the clan mothers "and other elders in the community who know best how to help their children."

"These things are not going to happen overnight, but I can tell you we're committed," she said.

Anderson-Pyrz,former co-chair of the Manitoba MMIWG Coalition, said she wasdisappointed by Stefanson's failure to offer concrete plans to tackle thecalls for justice.

"We need action. We need resources," Anderson-Pyrzsaid.

"We've heard a lot about commitment, but that commitment has to be backed by action and those who are in vulnerable situations have to feel the impact. We're going missing. We're dying at alarming rates, and we're experiencing violence at alarming rates."

Signs and red dresses hang on a fence outside a landfill south of Winnipeg.
A sign with a photo of Rebecca Contois, whose remains were found at Brady Road landfill in June, hangs outside the dump in south Winnipeg in January. (Alexia Bille/Radio-Canada)

The body of Anderson-Pyrz's sister, Dawn Anderson, was found in November 2011outside her home in the northern Manitoba town of Leaf Rapids.

Anderson-Pyrzalso mentionedTanya Nepinak, who went missing in September2011 and is presumed dead.

Winnipeg police have saidthey believeher body was dumped in a garbage bin and taken to the Brady landfill, but it has not been found.

"Your heart breaks each time. As an Indigenous community, we're in a perpetual state of grief," Anderson-Pyrzsaid.

Stefanson'spromise to keep working with the clan mothers is good, but not good enough without input from groups dedicated toMMIWG, two-spirit and gender-diverse people,Anderson-Pyrzsaid.

"I value the grandmothers and the support and the ceremony and everything beautiful they bring to the circle," she said.

"But it's really critical to ensure the voices of those who are being impacted and who require supports and resources are part of the circle, that their voices are being heard to create those protective factors and those pathways for prevention and security."