World is watching: commissioner of missing, murdered indigenous women inquiry
OTTAWA — The chief commissioner for the national inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women knows the world is watching her team — and she wants to assure Canadians much is happening behind the scenes even if it doesn’t seem like it.
“We are moving at great speed but we are also being careful about what we are doing,” Marion Buller said in an interview with The Canadian Press.
Buller’s remarks come after the Native Women’s Association of Canada commented earlier this week on a lack of “visible progress” on the inquiry — a process budgeted to cost $53.8 million and take two years.
“Family members, loved ones have been waiting for decades to be heard,”
NWAC’s president Francyne Joe said in a statement.


