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tv   Documentary  RT  March 5, 2023 12:30am-1:01am EST

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interest more. yeah, my niece was sleep on great. tonight are 2 and more children not be able to go to school. more women will not be able to deliver and hospitals or to access life, even healthcare. this is the reality of 8 fonts shortages. that's all for now. we're here to check out our t v dot com for all of the leave is breaking news and updates was the right back here at the top of the hour. ah, very temper. canada hasn't been very good up to indigenous women and girls who have been missing or found murdered because of structural racism, history, the cloning of history that canada has with indigenous people and communities. and it's so shameful history and
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a history that canada doesn't like to talk about it. not until just into those election in 2015 with it to boost colonization. finally shattered a beam elected prime minister, the young head of state give a message to the 1st nations community working together. hi, emily. the government of canada sincerely apologizes and asks the forgiveness of the aboriginal peoples of this country for failing them. so profoundly have to apologize to residential school victims, the prime minister tackle the scandal from for
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many decades. indigenous women and girls across canada have disappeared, suffered violence, or been killed. it is shameful. it is absolutely unacceptable, and it must end with the 1st time in the country's history, he acknowledged genocide. this is a gift to to the pioneers, both just intruded has raised the hopes of an entire people. but indigenous women are still dying. ah! after all, the promises grieving families expect action because most cases are never settled. i wanna make a theresa 100 of these little things,
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maybe more red dresses, to denounce the murders and disappearances. i know has been affected by the sad reality. her niece died 4 years earlier, found murdered in the basement of her house, the filled wherever children the case has never been solved. when a big police are putting out another call for public assistance in a definite a woman more than 7 months ago. anyone with information is called is asked to call investigators that said, this year will be 4 years that she's been gone. they said they're gonna notify the family all the time and they don't notify family and her family
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refused to admit defeat. so they will not let it go through with wow, anna betty is fighting for the truth as well. ah, for her, the scandal of fem aside is a personal issue in her sister died 4 years ago under suspicious circumstances with she was found by a person that was walking her dog in this area here. we were told that she had been there for possibly for 2 days. we don't know what happened ever since then. ever since may 2016 we been looking
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for answers the body for signs of a beating with wounds to the head and a fractured sterner. the police concluded death by alcohol poisoning. i refused to accept that someone can say, oh, you know what she died of alcohol poisoning because it makes me angry that if it was a caucasian middle aged man that was found there. like do you think the same the investigation would have been done? the same way, no, it wouldn't have, they would have been working really hard to find the answers. and so why are we have less value in work possible
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and that if one of us dies, then you know, it doesn't really matter. there's lots of people who have committed murder in this city and other parts of canada who are walking are on free. ah, and with a homicide rate, 4 times greater than the national average. thunder bay is dub canada's crime capital. dozens of suspicious deaths are closed without investigation, often involving 1st nations women. ah, for a long time the reality remained hidden until a report by
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a police watchdog said the cat among the pigeons. mm. mm. a scathing report by ontario's police watch dog has found thunder bass police service is rife with racism. and the handling of at least 9 cases involving the sudden death of indigenous people were so problematic. they should be re investigated. i found a systemic racism exist in thunder bay police service at an institutional level. investigations were too often handled differently because the deceased was indigenous investigators ignored evidence potentially pointed to a non accidental cause or contribution to the death. at least 9 of these cases should be re investigated by a multi disciplinary team. ah. after months of negotiations or given permission to cover the real,
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these 9 neglected cases. but at the last moment, the chief investigator, fails to show the replacement, the officer was sent to accompany us. a local policeman said he's been painted and a little bit of a negative late recently just with a lot of negative media our crime. we've been at the top of some of the pretty bad categories when it comes to crime. so your domestics are violent crimes or murder work or higher up there. so a lot of people see that and they paint hunter bay with a certain brush with i don't want anyone thinking that investigations are cut short, so we're here to reinvestigate these 9 and kind of go over the top. make sure every single thing is found. every stone is overturned,
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the officer must restore the police services prestige. it's a daunting task. i feel like that's gonna go a long way and rebuild a lot of the relationships between the police and the community. so we're arrived on scene here. it's our only indoor scene of the 9 scenes that were re investigating. so the access is going to be limited. so that's $210.00 east victoria avenue, ah, from the very 1st crime scene, we are kept at a distance our guide seizes the opportunity to make a few calls and chat to his colleagues expert about we leave the car, but the micro inside is still switched on i don't know,
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i agreed to do this. these 2 french guys are hilarious. they're amazing trust. or i got a mike on say, i got a mike on turn the thing off we returned to the car from someone who is the policeman. seems put out by our questions on him and right, right. he redefines the rules governing or interviewing is there a link between this crimes comes at richard? i'm sure the schools with all due respect, gentlemen, we've known each other for a couple hours and the way that there's so much negativity given on to the police that i don't especially the front of a police. i just don't feel comfortable giving those types of answers that could be chopped and put back together. do you know what i'm saying? i see. yeah. ah,
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there is 3 boys on here. the tour of crime scenes continues carefulness. no gentlemen, for we carry on along the river of tears, a canal with a sinister reputation. oh, in recent years, several indigenous corpses had been fish out of these waters. some of these cases are part of the new investigation. careful where you walk guys, because there's a lot of empty packages here from needles. so just have a look while you're walking. also unexplained, the deaths have been filed under accidental. that's what the police watchdog recorded in their report. so this is very christine glory was
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found at the end of march 2016 right. by the sign 29. at the time. the woman was found in the early hours for pants down and closed scattered despite signs of sexual activity and traces of dna held on file. the police quickly closed the case. officially, christina died from hypothermia. why was it classified as a sudden death? you're saying? yeah. because there was no evidence to say otherwise to lead it into an a criminal investigation. so you can't create evidence freight. if you're living a higher risk lifestyle and you're constantly using and abusing substances, then you're going to put yourself in high risk situations. so for the youths that live that lifestyle, whether whatever race they be, it's, you know,
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when you're doing that, you're playing a different game. there's, there's a bigger chance of something bad can happen if you surround yourself in situations that have a greater risk to them, to your health and safety. so ah, the usual reference to the indigenous lifestyle it is a common argument put forth by the police with the investigations now reopened. it's a sensitive subject to the case manager can leopard wanted to stick the line of questioning strictly 2 questions about the scenes. he didn't know that we would be doing all the stuff while at them. so what, what is the problem is to talk about what he thinks ah, yeah he, i think that might be part of it. i don't think he wants. i think he wants to keep
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the focus for us as investigator, simply on the 9, the 9 deaths because it's a sensitive question, very sensitive question. so it's got some sensitive elements to it for sure. but we could talk and if i don't feel comfortable asking, answering the question that i want to answer with the following morning, we make one final attempt at a crime scene, but they really are not going to go we use and i made it salem, but ideally chaslek knowledge was focal more of neat and clean. so key i cleared him up a quote as of course the things you need to see for me from out here on wednesday, which of the many and i think get, press 4. you can throw this up here, but i keep calling you. i just want to get a proposal. my bill, my la,
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the key for david perez watson's nvg or the big rush. but as if the books going up, please send me your thoughts. thanks honey. when i tell you more has been going on with terrible fire that keep your payment for gold. i block them alley from may. do math class. i did. so genia, i don't home on that ability class because it's a deal because of the game. the wild immanuel good for the dickies off, but i was on the way to waste oil by fabrics in your cheerios. i was on monday saw xanda capital children i spoke with lucy shantell refused, assuming the modem which seemed
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ah, the atmosphere has become even more frosty overnight. so anyway, i apologize. they told me not to ride with you guys and everybody scared that i don't know. i thought we had some good dialogue yesterday, and then the police chief arrives gentlemen, hey, how are you this morning? we're good. you are my old phone today. we're going to be all very close here. so what i was going to do is keep the media here in the parking lot to stay warm or we're going to be so you'll be able to see us doing our work from here. it takes investigators only a few minutes to complete their mission. with
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a few in thunder bay believe that the re investigation of these cases will produce results for her part i know continues to move heaven and earth to find the truth about her murdered niece. oh my beautiful and my beautiful and once a year, every year she gathers the family outside the house where her niece died. i need to like, i think, i think it's a, this is all that i know has to keep alive the memory of her dead nice. i after year of denial in
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silence the grievances of 1st nations people. so finally being aired, demonstrators gather outside the prime minister's office, and order was part of the building. as, as, as indigenous. he is leading the way to meeting with to recognize the non indigenous folks that are supporting as the stand by with the minister cherry when you're guilty, it says stomach and reckless discrimination against 1st nation children. you cough up, you pay up and you say, sorry, i want to say how inspired i am to see young indigenous standing up and their allies and the women
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were walking and brown and telling canada that there's a better way forward in that way is respecting the land and respecting the treaties and respecting the people i am honored to be a c. thank you. so charlie angus is one of the only politicians in canada to defend the rights of 1st nations, peoples. for more than 20 years. he has been present at every battle. his activism was triggered by events at the residential schools. i'm only like a member of parliament. these youngsters one candidate to acknowledge his role in the darker side of its history. ah, and finally break the taboos of colonization. i was almost 40 years old before ever stepped foot on him
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when i was elected my reach and just got some of the 1st nations communities anywhere. ah. and i remember same when i 1st landed in this community. it was just, it looked like a prisoner of war, kim and i said, what did the other member of parliament say when he came here and they laughed, they said the member of parliament never came to us. we had to find him. how can that be my country like canada, and did you think my name? that's canada. we think we know our history. we think we know our neighbors. and yet just beside a big center, there will be a reserve where there's no clean water. since 2013 charlie angus has been fighting alongside the victims of st. pounds, were children were tortured in the electric chair. yeah. unlike other victims of residential schools,
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they have received no financial reparations for the abuse. they suffered legal proceedings have been rumbling on for years and to become a symbol of a national scandal. these are all from the police investigations that were done at saint ann's report. the interview with the police officer was there use of an electric chair to administer, shocked to children who were tied in the chair. yes, there were consistent reports of the electric chair. some reports suggested it was used for entertainment. there were beatings, children forced heat, thrown vomit. yes. numerous people edge alleged that it affected them was their homosexual rape? yes. had her sexual rate. yes. it's like a horror movie. it goes on and on, on and on. when the case came to court, the canadian government adopted an odd position. it refused to handle for elegance
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. victims no longer have access to their own testimony. it will take years for them to recover it. all the government was forced to turn over those documents. but then they blacked out the names of many of the perpetrators. what we got back was page after page after page of empty documents, the government blacked out almost all the evidence for them. the documents weren't useful. so many of the worst criminals got away the bishop's got away. ah, the ones who done most of the damage never got charged. ah . okay. i got to go i used to think they were trying to hide somebody. i thought there was some bishop
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very important. but what they're protecting is they're protecting the government of canada from having to pay its obligations. ah, no. they're facing in canada. billions of dollars for this generation of indigenous children who are being taken away from their families. mm. losing the case against maintenance might bring to light other scandals and cost the state. dear, i welcome to ontario. i left flowers with flowers, got snow in parliament session is about to begin. and i'm going to be asking to find the government in contempt of parliament warning for falsifying informations.
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2 years earlier, the emp guild prime minister to the matter of evidence being concealed by the government generations all remember for timmins, james bay, children at st. andrew's eventual school suffered nightmarish levels of abuse, torture and child rape. and yet the office of the attorney general suppressed thousands of pages of police evidence that identified those perpetrators. and in doing so, they had cases thrown out and undermined the hearing. and now that the justice department has been forced to turn over those documents the claimant's inadmissible . unless the survivor finds a witness to verify these atrocities, to the prime minister, enough, the survivors the sane and his are a better will he instruct his garment and this obstruction of justice against the survivors saying as wants and far off, honorable prime minister, the ills done to indigenous people, over decades and centuries of colonialism in this country are shameful and are
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something that we need to learn from and move forward on. that includes respecting the rights of indigenous peoples now in all their different aspects. that's why we are working with survivors working, working with communities to ensure that we can move forward in a way that is fully respectful of all their rights as we get a get to the bottom of this of understand their history and make reparations in the right way moving forward. ah, despite the prime minister's promises, ah, the canadian government has adopted a new strategy and gone on the attack. ah, they will go to any lengths to unsettled their opponents. over $3000000.00 are being spent on court costs. ah,
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the government of the preferred seems to side with the perpetrators, and they're telling the public that they, with the latest act of this cynical approach is to prosecute the victims lawyer. ah, said bruning is represented the satan's plaintiff's for 10 years as a volunteer on this occasion. it is her clients who will be supporting her in a toronto courtroom with like edmund. they have come from all over ontario for the trial. ah
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how are you my friend, after to see? oh, i never let it keeps me keep moving. i my brain. oh, of course with a standpoint in the 1st case of its kind, why the lawyer is accused of slandering the court. ah! the potential $25000.00 fine would force her to withdraw her commitment to the victim's cause in after a short hearing, the judge rules in her favor, thanks to the survivors of saint dan's residential school. a whole people has just won its 1st battle. and with it,
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some kind of revenge on history. and the philosophy they said was to kill the indian and the child, which meant took them from their family and their land. they would cease to be indian people. but what they did was they created generations of damaged people, but never stop being indian people. ah, we are not free. we are prisoners of canada in 2020 a apologies apology. but the reality is, i still have my banner i will continue to fight until they say no more and act no more reserves
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were free. ah, [000:00:00;00] ah ah, ah, a lot of western countries are very concerned. the china might be sending russia me so weapons as a way to help brush us military. we can pay in ukraine. personally,
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it's my just approach personal view. i'm very suspicious of that. i don't buy dot to contradicts to what i, i see the basic logic of bell behavior puts on the phone. the chinese state. ah ah, the city is essentially surrounded. whereas earlier we were fighting against the professional ukrainian army. now we are seeing more and more elderly man and voice in the news that shaped the week ahead of russia. wagner. issues of public are dressed. you brains, president zelinski, telling him to let his severely weakened troops please from the city of archie mops, also known as back. a young boy, it's his life at risk while saving other children during a terrorist attack by cranium extremist group and the russian border region at brianna. i started taking off my coat and noticed the hole with blood

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