Indigenous Women's Justice Plan Released by BCFNJC

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Indigenous Women,Justice Plan,BCFNJC

The B.C. First Nations Justice Council (BCFNJC) has released the final draft of its Indigenous Women’s Justice Plan (IWJP), which aims to address the over-representation of women, girls, and LGBTQ+ and two-spirited people in the justice system.

Too many of her family members have fallen through the family, health-care and justice system cracks and lost their lives, Darla Rasmussen told B.C. First Nations Justice Council April 8.

“We need to show up and be present when somebody comes into our courtroom or our office space and we need to ask, ‘Are you hungry? Are you tired? So you feel safe, can we have this conversation?’” Rasmussen said. “We need to start working form our hearts and listening to those stories to better understand and have empathy and compassion.”

“We need to transform the justice system so that my three daughters are not likely to be incarcerated, or worse, because they are Indigenous.” “The IWJP is meant to support their self-determined pathways to justice and make their solutions and demands a reality,” the council said. The report came about from recommendations from the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls report, the Red Women Rising report and the Highway of Tears Symposium report.

 

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