Loretta Saunders's cousin hopeful for missing and murdered indigenous women inquiry - Action News
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Loretta Saunders's cousin hopeful for missing and murdered indigenous women inquiry

Consulting with family members of missing and murdered indigenous women is going to be a "wonderful part" of a newly announced public inquiry process, a relative of Loretta Saunders says.

Holly Jerrett believes an inquiry equals movement forward

Holly Jerrett also started the #AmINext social media campaign after her cousin Loretta Saunders was murdered. (Facebook)

Consulting with family members of missing and murdered indigenous women is going to be a "wonderful part" of a newly announcedpublic inquiry process,according to a cousin of Loretta Saunders, the Inuk woman who was foundmurdered nearly two years on aNew Brunswickhighway, and whose deathbrought additionalfocus to the issue.

"I'm really hopeful," said HollyJerrett, whose cousin was murdered in Nova Scotia, where she had been planning to write an academic thesis on murdered and missing aboriginal women.

"I really honestly believe that there's going to be movement forward now some actual real movement forward."

The Trudeaugovernment announced phase oneof the national inquiryplanon Tuesday.

Loretta Saunders, an Inuk woman, was murdered in Nova Scotia nearly two years ago. (Gofundme)

Ministers were set to start meetingwith the family members of murdered and missing womenin Ottawa this week.

"They need to know that our families are fractured, our families are damaged," said Jerrett.

"The proud, strong Inuk in me doesn't want to say anything like that but the fact and the reality is that we are."

What will work

Jerrett said as part of the national inquiry, indigenous people need to create their own dynamic of healing so that they don't become hurt by another system.

I really honestly believe that there's going to be movement forward now some actual real movement forward- Holly Jerrett

"Something that's going to work in Halifax for a Mi'kmaq family is not going to be the same kind of strategy that's going to work in Iqaluit with an Inuk family," she said.

"They really need to let us determine where we go."

She also said government needs to find a way to diversify and become empathetic.

#AmINext?

Jerrett was instrumental in creating social media awareness around missing and murdered aboriginal women.

She launched an electronic petition last year that garnered 347,000 signatures from 100 countries.

Another part of the campaign involved having a picture taken with a sign that reads #AmINext?

Jerrett isn't sure in what capacity, if any, she'll be involved with the inquiry. But, she says her campaign helped move a government and that's what she set out to do.

"I think the satisfaction in knowing I've moved a little bit, created a little bit of mobilization with [#AmINext]... that's satisfaction enough."