
Callingbull told CBC News she wants the current government out because it’s put indigenous issues on the back burner, including its approach to missing and murdered aboriginal women. “There’s a lot of issues that aren’t addressed in First Nations communities, like for example the murder and missing women that I’ve been talking about in every interview. There’s just a lot of things that we aren’t getting from the government. I believe that this government was created to work against us, and not for us.”
Missing, Murdered Women
Nearly 1,200 aboriginal women were murdered or went missing between 1980 and 2012, most in rural areas, according to a report released by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police last year, and aboriginal women have a homicide rate roughly 4.5 times higher than that of all other women in Canada. The RCMP updated those figures earlier this year to include 32 new homicides (within their jurisdiction) from 2013 to 2014, and 11 new cases of missing aboriginal women. The new report also confirmed that aboriginal women are most frequently killed by someone they know.
In response, CBC launched a database of unsolved cases of missing and murdered indigenous women in April. CBC Aboriginal shares a story weekly via social media, using the hashtag MMIW.
“I think that the murdered and missing subject is so crucial. It’s so sad. Say, for example, a Caucasian woman is missing in the news, it’s a big deal, but for First Nations women we are just pushed aside because there’s so many of us missing,” Callingbull told APTN.
There have been continuous calls for a national inquiry into the murders and disappearances of these women, but so far the Canadian government has ruled out such a move. In addition to the inquiry, some aboriginal leaders point to investing in education, training and child care on reserves and developing an action plan on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s recommendations on residential schools, released earlier this year, as election priorities.
An attempt by the satirical news website The Beaverton to draw attention to the issue of national coverage of missing and murdered indigenous women backfired after it withdrew a controversial article on Callingbull’s win and issued an apology. Headlined “Mrs. First Cree Woman to Gain National Coverage If She Disappears,” the article said, “Burnham is showing all those aboriginal girls out there that as long as you look like a supermodel and get on TV, you too can get the same news coverage as a white girl should you ever be abducted.” The article was met by major backlash and outrage from indigenous and other groups.
Not ‘Typical Beauty Queen’
While some have criticized Callingbull for being too political, she’s not backing down any time soon. In a Facebook post she responded to critics:
http://womensenews.org/story/cultural-trendspopular-culture/150903/mrs-universe-calls-out-canadas-neglect-aboriginal-women