As one can plainly see:
Arkéos, the archeological firm hired by McGill to undertake an archeological survey of the grounds, had been digging on the site with a bobcat two weeks before the injunction ruling was made.
Two weeks prior to the Mohawk Mothers’ injunction hearing, the firm said that the likelihood of unmarked graves was “very low.”
However, Karohia’no:ron Dallas Canady-Binette, a Mohawk archeology student from Kanesatake, said that the project failed to properly include Indigenous consent.
Because that would radically change the forensics of this.
Canada's House of Commons has unanimously passed a motion in favour of having the federal government recognize that its residential schools were an act of genocide.
The news has sparked encouragement from across the country, but also calls to action across social media to hold those accountable for the acts that have harmed Indigenous peoples, such as former prime ministers Jean Chrétien and the late Pierre Elliott Trudeau.
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