Nunavut wants to stop relying on other police forces to investigate RCMP shootings - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 08:50 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Nunavut wants to stop relying on other police forces to investigate RCMP shootings

The government of Nunavut is affirming itsintention to create a civilian police oversight body after a recentreview of a shooting death of an Inuk man.

Comment comes after Ottawa Police Service found no wrongdoing in RCMP fatal shooting of Inuk man

Territorial Justice Minister Jeannie Ehaloak says it's a priorityfor her government to stop relying on other police forces to investigate the actions of the RCMP. (David Gunn/CBC)

Nunavut is preparing legislation to create acivilian police review agency, after a recent investigation of a shootingdeath of an Inuk man released almost no information about whathappened.

"We are actively discussing partnerships with civilian leadinvestigative bodies and will soon bring forward the legislativechanges required to ensure a civilian body has full statutoryauthority to conduct investigations in the territory," NunavutJustice Minister Jeannie Ehaloak said in an email.

Ehaloak, who has said before that she supports civilian reviews, made the promise after the Ottawa Police Service released results ofan investigation into the shooting death of Attachie Ashoona inKinngait, Nunavut, on Feb. 27.

Investigators found officers "did not exceed the use of forcenecessary to control the situation."

No information on the circumstances was released. Ottawa policesaid they interviewed five RCMP officers and 10 people from thecommunity, but there was silence on what Ashoona was doing or whythe officers fired their guns.

Ashoona's name wasn't released until this week.

Where do we see crime? ...We see that in Nunavutbecause of the lack of basic human needsbeing met.- Mumilaaq Qaqqaq, Nunavut MP

"They're doing what the current system currently allows," saidBenson Cowan, head of Nunavut's legal aid society. "All it does iserode trust in the institutions that are so important."

Kinngait Mayor Timoon Toonoo confirmed council hadn't receivedany information on the investigation.

"We haven't got anything," he said.

Cowan said the review may have been thorough and complete. Butnobody except the investigators knowthat.

"I don't think anyone would look at this and say this wouldbuild trust."

'Less than the bare minimum forInuit,' MP says

Trust between Inuit and RCMP has been an issue for a long time.

"Nunavummiut have expressed the desire to move away from police-led investigations into serious incidents involving members of theRCMP," MinisterEhaloak said.

Northern media report there are at least six currentinvestigations into RCMP behaviour. Several Arctic politicians have
called for body cameras on Mounties.

In June, video showed an apparently intoxicated Inukman being knocked over by the door of a slowly moving police vehicle before hewas arrested. He was taken to the detachment lockup where he was allegedly badly beaten by a fellow prisoner. The man was never charged.

There are historic grievances as well. The force has beencriticized for its role in ushering Inuit into communities and
killing sled dogs that would have allowed them to leave.

Nunavut RCMP were not available for comment.

Mumilaaq Qaqqaq, Nunavut's MP, urged Minister Ehaloak to look at other solutions to policing problems in Nunavut, pointing to Indigenous police services in other parts of Canada. (Sara Frizzell/CBC)

New Democrat Nunavut MP Mumilaaq Qaqqaq said civilian oversightof police would be a good thing.

"Where do we see violence? Where do we see crime? We see thatwhere there is poverty ...We see that in Nunavut because of the lack of basic human needsbeing met."

She urged Ehaloak to look at other solutions to policing problemsin Nunavut, pointing to Indigenous police services in other parts ofCanada.

Qaqqaq said the federal government needs to step up to ease ills, such as poor housing, behind many of Nunavut's social and criminalproblems.

"The federal government is doing less than the bare minimum forInuit," she said.

CBC recently collected and analyzed data that showedInuit in Nunavut are dying during interactions with police at a rate significantly higher than in Yukon, the Northwest Territories and Ontario.

CBC also found that between 1999, when Nunavut was created, and 2009, there were three police-related deaths in the territory, according to the territory's chief coroner's office.

Between 2010 and July 2020, there have been 13 police-relateddeaths,fora total of 16 deaths in 21 years.

"It looks like there's something systematic here,"Anthony Doob, a professor emeritus of criminology at the University of Toronto with 40year'sexperience analyzing crime statistics, told CBC News earlier this summer.

With files from CBC News