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Bachrach backs Red Dress Alert System as Bulkley Valley prepares to mark Red Dress Day

A tentative plan has been made to meet at Smithers RCMP and proceed to Witset for ceremony/food
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Mural by Maddie Sanders. Courtesy of WSCADV.

Missing, murdered Indigenous women, girls and two-spirited people will be remembered and honoured in Smithers and Witset to commemorate Red Dress Day on May 5.

Tentatively, families and supporters are planning to meet at the RCMP detachment in Smithers and make their way out to Witset for a ceremony and food according to Kayla Mitchell, a perennial organizer of MMIWG events.

Meanwhile, Skeena Bulkley Valley MP Taylor Bachrach joined with Winnipeg Centre MP Leah Gazan to host a virtual event on May 3 with constituents to push for the government to create a National Red Dress Awareness system.

“The crisis of murdered and missing Indigenous women and girls has had a devastating impact on families and communities in our region,” Bachrach said. “The Red Dress Alert will be an important tool to ensure when families’ loved ones go missing, they are found as soon as possible.”

This system would use the cell phone network to alert the public when Indigenous women, girls, and 2SLGBTQ+ people are reported missing.

The virtual event took place just a day after parliament unanimously adopted MP Gazan’s motion calling on the federal government to declare ongoing violence against Indigenous women, girls and two-spirit people a national emergency. The motion also urged the government to create the Red Dress Alert system.

“I’m very pleased today that all members of Parliament are acknowledging the truth about the history in this country, as a way to move forward,” Gazan said in response to acceptance of the motion. “It’s one thing to acknowledge the truth. It’s another thing to act on it. We don’t have the privilege to discuss and debate … Our loved ones are going missing and the government needs to act now.”

Chantal Meggison, an organizer of a red dress walk in Prince Rupert said she wishes the MMIWG crisis had been acknowledged as an emergency much sooner but she is still grateful for the government’s forward action.

“Why has it taken so long? When I say ‘it’s about time,’ I mean why did all of those names have to pile so high? If this emergency had been recognized sooner, it may have prevented missing women or brought them home sooner. It’s shameful and sad that so many have not made it home,” she said.

With files from Thom Barker


K-J Millar | Editor and Multimedia Journalist
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