Politics

Still no way to tell how many Indigenous women and girls go missing in Canada each year

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StatsCan and some major police forces do not track missing Indigenous women

A vigil shown here at the Mi'kmaq Native Friendship Centre in Halifax. An informal survey by CBC News of national, provincial and municipal police forces in Canada shows a patchwork approach to gathering information on missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls. (Nic Meloney/CBC)

Even after the launch of a $53.8-million national inquiry and an increased focus on the issue, there is still no way to tell how many Indigenous women and girls go missing in Canada each year.

An informal CBC News survey of national, provincial and municipal police forces across the country shows a patchwork approach to gathering and cataloguing information, with some agencies keeping track of the race, ethnicity or cultural affinity of murder victims but not of those who've gone missing.

"Unless we have this data, unless we have the numbers that are showing us what sort of trends are happening across this country ... we can't understand the reasons that our women are going missing," said Francyne Joe, president of the Native Women's Association of Canada.

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Since 2005, her group has been pushing to draw attention to the high rates of violence against Indigenous women.

The most comprehensive numbers on missing Indigenous women still come from the RCMP's 2014 report Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women: A National Operational Overview.

For that report, the RCMP collected files from Statistics Canada and 300 police forces across the country. It showed there were 164 Indigenous women who were missing and 1,017 Indigenous women who had been murdered over the past 30 years.

An update in 2015 found 174 Indigenous women were missing, and 111 of those cases were considered to be under suspicious circumstances.

But those numbers aren't being updated every year, according to Byron Boucher, the RCMP's assistant commissioner for contract and aboriginal policing.

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"We can keep track of our own data, but we no longer have access to any of the other police forces' data. To do it again, we would have to go back to that same 300-plus police forces and ask permission to be able to do that," Boucher told CBC News.

'Not a crime to be missing'

For its part, Statistics Canada now requires all police services to report whether a homicide victim is Indigenous, according to Warren Silver, an analyst with the agency.

But police forces don't have to report missing Indigenous women to the national statistics agency.

"We don't have data on missing women," said Silver. "It's not a crime to be missing."

Since August 2016, the RCMP has been using a new mandatory missing persons form that requires details about the ethnic origin and cultural affinity of each person reported missing.

"I think it's something that we probably should have been doing a lot earlier," said Boucher. "The more information, the better."

Marlene Jack, left, hugs Gladys Radek after testifying at the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls inquiry. The $53.8-million national inquiry is looking at the underlying causes of violence against Indigenous women and girls. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

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However, Boucher said, the information is not being gathered to get a national picture of the problem.

"We're collecting it not in terms of keeping it to determine a trend — I think we already know, based on the 2014 report, what the issues are," said Boucher. "We're collecting it more to solve that particular issue around a missing person."

While the RCMP is increasing efforts to find missing Indigenous women, it patrols only 20 per cent of the population in Canada. The rest of the country falls under the jurisdiction of provincial, municipal and First Nations police forces. The RCMP and other forces don't co-ordinate the questions on their missing persons forms.

"I don't know exactly what other police forces are doing," said Boucher. "But we are happy to share anything that we are doing."

National database incomplete

Police forces across the country feed information into a searchable national police database, known as CPIC, that includes missing persons reports. But it's only as complete as the data provided.

CBC News contacted 16 municipal and provincial police forces across the country to see if they are taking the same approach as the RCMP in asking about the cultural affinity or ethnic origin of missing persons.

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That informal survey revealed that provincial police forces in Ontario, Quebec and Newfoundland and Labrador ask questions to determine the race of the missing person.

It also found that 10 of the larger municipal forces ask about race and some also ask about the cultural affinity of missing people. They are:

Vancouver.

Calgary.

Regina.

Winnipeg.

Toronto.

Montreal.

Quebec City.

Fredericton.

Halifax.

Charlottetown.

But three other big-city forces — Edmonton, Saskatoon and Ottawa — do not.

'Big gap'

Joe, of the Native Women's Association of Canada, calls the status quo a "disappointing" patchwork approach to tracking missing Indigenous women.

"We don't have the full picture — there is a big gap, unfortunately," she said.

Joe said the solution is a national central database that can be used by all forces, which would help show where the problems are.

"Maybe we can understand why certain areas have a higher issue than other areas: Is it the urban centres? Is it northern communities? Is it on reserve? Is it off reserve?

"But until we have these tangible results, we are only guessing at this point."