FNX NOW: Authorities Will Not Recover Bodies of Missing Indigenous Women from Manitoba Landfills

Authorities Will Not Recover Bodies of Missing Indigenous Women from Manitoba Landfills
Winnipeg, Manitoba, CAN.
On a grassy area behind the Human Rights Museum on Route 57, just as Provencher BLVD crosses over the Red River in Winnipeg Manitoba; Lies Camp Marcedes. The camp, named after Marcedes Myron, exists to take a stand against local authorities who have decided not to search for and recover the bodies of murdered indigenous women, whom they believe were dumped in local landfills. The encampment is made up of protectors, defenders, and family members; more often referred to as protestors by the non-native media outlets that have given them attention.
Speaking from Camp Marcedes, Wabishka Maiigan (Anishinaabe) spoke to us about his presence at the camp. “Our sisters are in the landfill. We go back to Tonya Nepinak back in 2012, where she was dumped in the landfill here in Winnipeg, Manitoba.” Maiigan continued, “and you compare that with the man that was found at the Toronto landfills. Took eight months for the Toronto Police or the federal government to find the man that was missing.”
Maiigan referenced the 8-month search for Nathaniel Brettell, a 57-year-old Caucasian man whose body was recovered from a half-mile square acre landfill in Toronto. In contrast, Manitoba Authorities have refused to continue searching in a significantly smaller 200 by 100-meter space at the Prairie Green landfill, citing health risks for workers. Some community members believe race to be a factor, and are suspicious of their decisions, and their motives.
“They just keep coming up with excuses, one after the other, it cost too much or there’s asbestos” said Gold Star, a fire keeper at Camp Marcedes who also spends time at Camp Morgan near the Brady landfill. “Any common sense person would want to search it, it doesn’t matter whose child it is, it’s a child, and they’re in there, and we got to get them, we can’t leave them” Star said. Camp Morgan was set up in honor of Morgan Harris.
Both camp Morgan and Camp Mercedes aim to put pressure on the authorities to alter their decision not to recover the bodies they suspect are in the Landfill. But there are local community members that agree with those decisions. An unidentified passerby who claimed to be Métis from Red River, is opposed to the cost and risk of a search but offered thoughts on an alternative. “With the searching of the dump, for $184 million, and possibly injuring or hurting people that are going to be searching it, why not just close it down? Make it into a memorial park for these women and have it as your land and then have the government give the owners of the dump some land somewhere else and we just shut it off.”
Pamela Myran (Long Plain First Nation) whose daughter Marcedes Myran is believed by police to be in the Prairie Green Landfill took offense to the passerby’s comment “you need to start looking after your children.” Pamela responded by saying “I’m fighting for my baby to have a proper burial. I’m fighting for all those people to have a proper burial. What are we supposed to do put flowers in that landfill?”
A feasibility study published in August believes risks can be mitigated and proposed a pathway with high probability of recovery. We reached out to Media Relations for the Winnipeg Police Department, but they did not directly respond to questions about their continued stance not to search the landfill.
Manitoba Premiere Heather Stefanson’s office directed us to the province’s website www.gov.com, and gave us a contact number for communications and stakeholders, but did not directly comment about the camps. However, Stefanson has stated in the past, that she would not support a landfill search, despite calls to reconsider from the Assembly of First Nations, a political organization of chiefs representing first nation citizens.
Both Camps Mercedes and Morgan plan to remain in operation until the Landfills are searched, and the bodies of all the women can be laid to rest in proper burials. Pamela Myron shared with us a chilling prediction from her daughter Marcedes. “Before my daughter died she told me she was going to be famous; I’m just gonna bring everybody out she said.”
Should the camps be successful in getting the landfills searched and should that lead to the discovery of other missing women, it will be the silent voices of Marcedes Myron, Morgan Harris, and Buffalo women, the help make that happen.
This story was produced in partnership with:
Antonia Gonzales (Navajo), anchor and producer of National Native News and Managing News Editor for Khoanic Broadcast Corporation.
Rhonda LeValdo (Acoma Pueblo), Host of Native Spirit Radio on KKFI, Kansas City.
Darren Brown (Cochiti Pueblo,Choctaw), Senior Producer at Cheyenne and Arapaho Television in Concho Oklahoma.
Story written and produced by Frank Blanquet (Maya), Producer, Director of Television at FNX, First Nations Experience Television.
@AmandaHugandKiss411
October 3, 2024 at 1:16 pm
I grew up in Wpg and was a homeless teen in the mid 80s. I am not Aboriginal.
I experienced and witness many disturbing things.
I firmly believe that the government or city of Wpg does not want to search the landfill, is because they will find more people then these particular women.
I don't wish to harm anyone with my comments but I was grabbed more than once, 3 times I was able to fight my attacker(s) and run. And one time I was unable to because it was a group of males 18 to 30 years of various ethnic backgrounds.
I was held, locked in a closet, and brought out into the living room area to be group r$ped and beaten, to be then locked in a closet. This went on multiple times during each day and I was held for approximately 6 to 7 days.
I woke up on the bank of the Red River, horizontal to the water, with my leg, side of my body and arm in the water, the rest of me was in the clay dirt of the river bank. My clothes, torn, with blood, beer and river water and mud. I was in the area of the Red River near Point Douglas Area and the old shipping area.
The reason I am saying this is, it isn't just Aboriginal women, it is Canada women and young boys and males too.
Wpg is a very dangerous city. It attracts a variety of predators, lone wolf serial killers to groups of predators working together.
I will say this, I don't look Aboriginal in any way. And I know others who had been grabbed and managed to get away. Some Aboriginal some white. When the grab you they don't go oh sorry, you're not Aboriginal and let you go.
My point is the landfill,all of the ones around Wpg , are one of the many dumping sites.
The landfills MUST be searched.
Because it contains many people.
To do this type of search is similar to a archeological search: meaning the searchers will find various bone, hair, teeth etc and will then try to match there findings to these women DNA.
The ARE going to find others, I guarantee it.
That's why they don't want to do the search, too many missing girls, women, boys and males. Over an extended period of time.
They don't want the general public to realize that the police and RCMP have known about this for many decades. That's what they are hiding, that's what they don't want people to know.
I have the greatest respect for the families of these missing women to not let this issue be swept under the rug.
They have brought light to a great horror.
And by their steadfast strength aren't just fighting for their daughters, sisters or mothers, but for all missing persons.
It IS time to do the search. Period.
@glennamarley3170
October 3, 2024 at 1:16 pm
Mercedes mother IS "LOOKING" AFTER HER DAUGHTER! Crappy man…
MMIWC must not be discounted or ignored.