Skip to main content

Patty Hajdu speaks to reporters on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on March 25, 2017.The Canadian Press

A Thunder Bay MP says she's not surprised by "appalling" new numbers that suggest the Ontario city has the highest rate of metropolitan hate crime in Canada.

Patty Hajdu, who's also the federal labour minister, used to run a homeless shelter in the remote northwestern Ontario city that was populated primarily by indigenous people.

"I am ashamed to say that I wasn't surprised to see that, as someone who has lived in that community for a very long time and I have some long-standing relationships with indigenous people," Hajdu said in an interview.

"I can tell you that it is not actually that shocking to me."

Last week, a Statistics Canada report said most of the police-reported hate incidents in Thunder Bay were against indigenous people, accounting for 29 per cent of all anti-aboriginal hate crimes across Canada in 2015.

Hajdu said she often heard from local residents who routinely experienced fear on the streets.

"Young people have told me repeatedly of walking home and having things flung at them out of cars," she said.

"Indigenous women and indigenous men who have experienced going to a store ... and when they put their hand out to receive change, the storekeeper will purposely not touch their hand."

The Statistics Canada figures reflect a long-standing disintegration of the relationship between indigenous and non-indigenous people, Hajdu added, calling it "appalling."

Nishnawbe Aski Nation Grand Chief Alvin Fiddler said the safety of aboriginal people is indeed a serious issue in the city, where the recent mysterious deaths of two indigenous teenagers made headlines across Canada.

Fiddler cited a recent Ontario inquest into the deaths of seven indigenous young people in Thunder Bay, where witnesses described the daily experience of having garbage and racial epithets hurled in their direction.

"The racism —it is something that is very much real ... so it wasn't a surprise to many of us when we heard the latest numbers released last week."

Last year's inquest explored what happened to Paul Panacheese, 21, Robyn Harper, 19, Curran Strang, 18, Kyle Morrisseau, 17, and Jethro Anderson, Jordan Wabasse and Reggie Bushie, all 15.

Their deaths occurred over a decade — from 2000 to 2011 — while they attended school in Thunder Bay.

More recently, the city has been in the spotlight again following the deaths of 17-year-old Tammy Keeash and 14-year-old Josiah Begg.

Keeash's body was found in the Neebing-McIntyre floodway early last month and the body of Begg was found less than two weeks later.

Fiddler and other indigenous leaders are calling for an RCMP investigation, citing local mistrust of Thunder Bay police.

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale has said municipal police jurisdiction is entirely within the purview of the provincial government, which means Thunder Bay and the province will need to take "appropriate decisions."

Fiddler said safety concerns are so grave, parents are reconsidering sending their children to Thunder Bay to go to school, even though many First Nations communities only have facilities that go to Grade 8.

"Grade 9, you're looking at a 13, 14-year-old child," he said. "That's pretty young for a 14 or even a 15-year-old to be sent far away from their home and to a place like Thunder Bay would be obviously a concern for any parent."

Family members at the inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women are urging the commissioners to build on what they learned at the Whitehorse hearings before they move on to other communities.

The Canadian Press

Interact with The Globe