New ‘Circle’ to guide safety of MMIWG2S+ during resource extraction projects
A member of the new Circle for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls and Gender…
A member of the new Circle for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls and Gender…
Indigenous leaders say two staff members at a Saskatchewan courthouse were told to go home…
Clarence Woodhouse from Pinaymootang First Nation in Manitoba is free after being acquitted of a…
Bill C-40 was designed to speed up conviction review process
Indigenous leaders in Fort Chipewyan in northern Alberta are accusing the federal government of failing…
The minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations is dismissing the call for a national inquiry into the…
Clarence Woodhouse and his Innocence Canada lawyers are scheduled to appear in a Winnipeg courtroom Thursday
Province took ‘colonialistic approach’ to developing policy, says Blackfoot doctor.
One First Nations physician says the Canadian Medical Association’s apology to First Nations, Inuit, and Metis peoples falls short. Dr. James Makokis says with it’s records, the CMA should have been able to provide the number of people harmed by the medical system. He also says the apology failed to name the racism responsible for the harms done, which he says is white supremacy.
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