Canada, Genocide of Indigenous peoples and the International Court of Justice

Is it possible for genocide to be committed only by states with totalitarian and authoritarian political regimes? Events and studies in Canada over the past few decades prove the opposite. A wealth of Canadian state documents, witnesses, officials’ confessions, and surveys show that the genocide of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Abdollah Abedini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mofid University 2023-05-01
Series:حقوق بشر
Subjects:
Online Access:https://humanrights.mofidu.ac.ir/article_704183_78f99f81eca850c7c6da20196640e061.pdf
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Summary:Is it possible for genocide to be committed only by states with totalitarian and authoritarian political regimes? Events and studies in Canada over the past few decades prove the opposite. A wealth of Canadian state documents, witnesses, officials’ confessions, and surveys show that the genocide of Indigenous peoples as the main owners of the land was carried out in a very slow, lethal, and mostly non-lethal manner against this population. The article, while reviewing the facts of the case in the light of case law and related international documents, considers the option of bringing an action against the state of Canada in the International Court of Justice to reiterate to the members of the international community the need for appropriate action. Reconsider their approach to the people under their jurisdiction so that they do not commit genocide as the most heinous international crime, and thus we witness a day without repeating the unbelievable stories of a generation of people trying to destroy other generations.
ISSN:2423-6489
2538-6360