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Trudeau should have visited First Nation during Saskatchewan stop: Indigenous leaders

SASKATOON 鈥 The Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations says it is dismayed Prime Minister Justin Trudeau did not visit the First Nation where a child鈥檚 bone was found at a former residential school site.
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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tours the Vital Metals rare earths element processing plant in Saskatoon on Monday, January 16, 2023. The Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations says it is dismayed Trudeau did not visit the First Nation where a child鈥檚 bone was found at a former residential school site while the prime minister was in the province.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Liam Richards

SASKATOON 鈥 The Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations says it is dismayed Prime Minister Justin Trudeau did not visit the First Nation where a child鈥檚 bone was found at a former residential school site.

The Star Blanket Cree Nation announced last week that a fragment of a child鈥檚 jawbone was unearthed and ground-penetrating radar found 2,000 areas of interest.

Trudeau, who was at a rare earth elements processing plant in Saskatoon on Monday, called the discovery of the partial remains heartbreaking.

The prime minister said he spoke with the First Nation鈥檚 chief Friday about ongoing support from the federal government.聽

Federation Chief Bobby Cameron said the prime minister should have gone to the First Nation northeast of Regina in person to show respect to survivors. Not being there shows those in the community that their suffering isn鈥檛 valued as much as a tour of the processing plant, he said.

鈥淗is lack of respect is hurtful towards all residential school survivors and descendants, who are grappling with how to handle finding the child's remains and more unmarked graves,鈥 Cameron said in a news release.聽

An official speaking on background said when the Prime Minister's Office receives an official invitation, it makes it a mission to be there.

First Nation leaders invited Trudeau to Star Blanket鈥檚 announcement, the federation said, but he declined because he was waiting to confirm a meeting with the Japanese Prime Minister. Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Marc Miller attended by video call.聽

The federation has formally invited the prime minister to the First Nation in the coming months.聽

鈥淲e want him to see the site. The amount of anomalies is devastating to our people who wonder how many of our relatives may have died there,鈥 File Hills Qu鈥橝ppelle Tribal Chair Jeremy Fourhorns said in the news release.聽

鈥淭his is a dark part of Canadian history that deserves acknowledgment from the prime minister of sa国际传媒.鈥

The Qu鈥橝ppelle Indian Residential School, about 75 km northeast of Regina, was one of the first three to open in sa国际传媒 and was run by the Roman Catholic Church through the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate from 1884 to 1973.聽

It operated for another 25 years until it closed in 1998.

The jawbone fragment, found in October, was identified by the province鈥檚 coroner鈥檚 service to be that of a child between the ages of four and six from about 125 years ago.

An estimated 150,000 Indigenous children were forced to attend residential schools over a century in sa国际传媒 and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission鈥檚 final report detailed that many experienced emotional, physical, sexual and spiritual abuse.聽

The Indian Residential Schools Resolution Health Support Program has a hotline to help residential school survivors and their relatives suffering trauma invoked by the recall of past abuse. The number is 1-866-925-4419.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 16, 2023.

Kelly Geraldine Malone, The Canadian Press