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Friday, November 22, 2024
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Friday, November 22, 2024 | Latest Paper

Kim Beaudin and Justin Piché

If feds are serious about Indigenous justice and ending colonial violence, bring Charman Smith home

If the federal government and prime minister are serious about making meaningful changes, it cannot continue to ignore the plight of Indigenous people serving sentences abroad, like Charman Smith—pictured at a June 2 virtual press conference—who’ve been forcibly confined and displaced, write Kim Beaudin and Justin Piché. Screenshot courtesy of APTN
If the federal government and prime minister are serious about making meaningful changes, it cannot continue to ignore the plight of Indigenous people serving sentences abroad, like Charman Smith—pictured at a June 2 virtual press conference—who’ve been forcibly confined and displaced, write Kim Beaudin and Justin Piché. Screenshot courtesy of APTN
If the federal government and prime minister are serious about making meaningful changes, it cannot continue to ignore the plight of Indigenous people serving sentences abroad, like Charman Smith—pictured at a June 2 virtual press conference—who’ve been forcibly confined and displaced, write Kim Beaudin and Justin Piché. Screenshot courtesy of APTN
If the federal government and prime minister are serious about making meaningful changes, it cannot continue to ignore the plight of Indigenous people serving sentences abroad, like Charman Smith—pictured at a June 2 virtual press conference—who’ve been forcibly confined and displaced, write Kim Beaudin and Justin Piché. Screenshot courtesy of APTN