Tories table plan to stop violence against aboriginal women and girls - Action News
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Tories table plan to stop violence against aboriginal women and girls

The federal government has tabled a plan to address violence against aboriginal women and girls, says Minister for Status of Women Kellie Leitch as MPs return to Parliament.

Conservatives will devote $25 million over five years to deliver plan

Kellie Leitch, minister of Labour and Status of Women, has tabled the government's action plan to address family violence and violent crime against aboriginal women and girls. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

The federal government hastabled aplan to address violence against aboriginal women and girls, announced Minister for Status of Women Kellie Leitchas MPs returned to Parliament after the summer recess today.

"We have heard from victims' families directly and they want action. And that's precisely what we are delivering,"said Leitchduring question period today.

The government has budgeted $25 million over five years to deliver the plan a commitment first announced in the February 2014 budget.

The plan flows from the 16 recommendations MPs sitting on theSpecial Committee on Violence Against Indigenous Women made last March.

The $25 million plan, which would run from 2015-20, wouldinclude:

  • $8.6 million over five years to support aboriginal communities in developing community safety plans.
  • $2.5 million over five years to help aboriginal peoplecreate projects and raise awareness "to break intergenerational cycles of violence and abuse."
  • $5 million over five years to work with aboriginal communities and stakeholders, as well as aboriginal men and boys, to denounce and prevent violence against aboriginal women.
  • $7.5 million over five years to help victims and their families through the Victims Fund and the Policy Centre for Victim Issues.
  • $1.4 million over five years "to share information and resources with communities and organizations, and report regularly on progress made and results."

The opposition parties continued to call on the Conservatives to heed calls for a nationalpublic inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women.

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair said only a public inquiry would get to the root causes of the problem. "There's still a lot of work than can be done looking at the systemic causes here, and that's what we're calling for," he told reporters on Monday.

Mulcair has said if the NDP were to form the government after the next federal election, it would call a public inquiry within 100 days.

Liberal aboriginal affairs critic Carolyn Bennett denounced today's plan as "political smoke and mirrors."

In a statement to CBC News, Bennett said "todays so-called 'Action Plan' simply implements the whitewashed recommendations of the Conservative dominated Special Committee and is nothing more than a laundry list of existing piecemeal government initiatives, many not even specific to Indigenous women and girls."

Bennett said the Conservatives should call a "non-partisan" inquiry to find out "why this problem has persisted for decades and why successive governments have been unable to fix it."

Today's announcement is in addition to other initiatives the government has said it will support, such as the creation of a DNA-based missing persons database.