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Canadian Museum for Human Rights backs calls to search Winnipeg-area landfill for remains

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Manitoba

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The Canadian Museum for Human Rights says it fully supports calls to search for the remains of Indigenous women believed to be the victims of an alleged Winnipeg serial killer.

‘The human rights implications are clear,’ head of museum wrote to AMC grand chief

CBC News

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The back of a woman's head is seen in front of a sign with two women wearing red dresses.

Supporters of Camp Marcedes are pictured shortly after it was set up near the Canadian Museum for Human Rights last month. (Prabhjot Singh Lotey/CBC)

The Canadian Museum for Human Rights says it fully supports calls to search for the remains of Indigenous women believed to be the victims of an alleged Winnipeg serial killer.

“In this situation, the human rights implications are clear,” Isha Khan, CEO of the Winnipeg-based museum, wrote in an Aug. 9 letter addressed to Grand Chief Cathy Merrick of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs.

In the letter, Khan cites Article 12 of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which says Indigenous peoples have the right to retrieve the remains of family and community members.

“It is a universal human value that the remains of the dead should be treated with dignity and their families accorded respect,” she wrote.

The push to search the privately owned Prairie Green landfill, north of Winnipeg, for the remains of Morgan Harris and Marcedes Myran has been growing.

Last month, supporters set up Camp Marcedes — an encampment named for Myran — outside the human rights museum at The Forks, shortly after an injunction was granted to remove protesters who had been blockading the entrance to the city-owned Brady Road landfill in south Winnipeg.

Late last year, Winnipeg police said they believe the remains of Harris and Myran were taken to the Prairie Green landfill in May 2022, but that it would not have been feasible to search by the time that determination was made.

The partial remains of another victim, Rebecca Contois, were found in June 2022 at the Brady Road landfill. A fourth victim’s identity and location are still unknown, but she has been given the name Mashkode Bizhiki’ikwe, or Buffalo Woman.

Police allege all four were killed by Jeremy Skibicki, who has been charged with first-degree murder in their deaths. His trial is scheduled for April 2024.

A woman is shown.

Isha Khan, CEO of the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, says it has a duty to promote discussions and contemplation on human rights issues as a national institution. (Gary Solilak/CBC)

The pressure for a search of Prairie Green for the remains of Myran and Harris intensified when Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson said last month that her government would not support such a search, citing dangers to searchers from exposure to toxic material.

A feasibility study completed in May determined a search could take up to three years and cost up to $184 million, but was feasible.

In her letter to Merrick, Khan alludes to the financial and safety concerns, calling them “issues on which we defer to others” but adds “given our role, we must affirm the human rights imperative to act.”

‘Deep human rights implications’: AMC

The Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs expressed gratitude for Khan’s letter in a Tuesday news release.

The museum’s support of a search for Harris, Myran and Buffalo Woman “highlights the deep human rights implications of the situation,” the release stated.

The museum holds hundreds of art pieces made during the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls and has a duty to promote discussions and contemplation on human rights issues as a national institution, Khan said in her letter to the AMC.

“We carry the responsibility to honour those who have been murdered or gone missing,” the letter said, and “to highlight how Canada’s treatment of Indigenous peoples often offends the ideas of universal dignity that underpin our national commitment to human rights.”

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