Global rights groups to keep eye on Canada’s missing, murdered women inquiry
OTTAWA — The number of missing or murdered indigenous women in Canada has not escaped the attention of members of the international human rights community, who will keep a close eye on a national inquiry they say is long overdue.
“I think the international community in general is looking to see Canada live up to the human rights principles and values that it espouses,” said Meghan Rhoad, with Human Rights Watch in Washington, D.C.
The United Nations and other international human rights bodies and non-governmental organizations have all issued reports on the nearly 1,200 indigenous women and girls who have gone missing or been murdered in Canada.
Canadian families and advocates alike have used that degree of global scrutiny to amplify their calls for an inquiry — calls that until this year have gone unheeded.


