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On Friday, CBC News reported on a leaked copy of the final report, saying it runs over 1,200 pages and contains more than 230 recommendations. According to CBC, the report concludes that the thousands of murders and disappearances of Indigenous women and girls constitute a “Canadian genocide.” It also includes the recommendation that homicides in cases of domestic violence be treated as first-degree murder.

In a statement Friday afternoon, Bennett’s office said it would not comment on the details of the final report before Monday.

The Liberals will be under pressure to respond to the inquiry’s recommendations in the last months before the fall federal election, as the inquiry was one of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s key commitments ahead of his election in 2015. But the Liberals are left with virtually no time to make any legislative changes, as Parliament will rise in June and likely won’t sit again until after the election.

The tight timeline is the result of a six-month extension the government granted the inquiry last year, after the commissioners had asked for two additional years to complete their work. Bennett voiced some disappointment over the delay. “The original intent was the report would be in November (2018), such that we would have had not only a legislative cycle but a budget cycle to be able to deal with the recommendations,” she said.

In a hint of what’s to come in the inquiry’s final report, Buller made her recommendations about stricter sentencing to a Senate committee earlier in May. In response, the committee passed three amendments to the Liberals’ criminal justice legislation, Bill C-75, that could pave the way for harsher sentences for those convicted of domestic violence against Indigenous women. Buller said the amendments are “a good step towards creating more safety for Indigenous women and girls.”