Quebec inquiry that examined treatment of Indigenous people calls for apology
MONTREAL — A Quebec inquiry that examined relations between Indigenous communities and the provincial government delivered a scathing final report on Monday that called on the province to apologize to First Nations and Inuit peoples for systemic discrimination.
The Viens Commission laid out 142 recommendations, or calls to action, for the Quebec government and urged the province to move on them.
“It seems impossible to deny the systemic discrimination experienced by First Nations and Inuit peoples in their relations with the public services investigated,” retired Quebec Superior Court judge Jacques Viens wrote in his 520-page report.
“While the problems are not always systemic, the commission’s work has made one thing evident: existing structures and processes show a clear lack of sensitivity to the social, geographical and cultural realities of Indigenous peoples.”