Geraldine Bob, a former student, told the commission that the staff members “would just start beating you and lose control and hurl you against the wall, throw you on the floor, kick you, punch you.”
In her statement, Chief Casimir said that the search for remains began in the early 2000s. “With access to the latest technology, the true accounting of the missing students will hopefully bring some peace and closure to those lives lost and their home communities,” she said.
According to Chief Casimir, radar revealed the remains of children as young as 3.
“The loss of 215 children found on the grounds of a residential school is a national tragedy,” Chief Bobby Cameron of the Federation of Sovereign Indian Nations in Saskatchewan said in a statement. He asked the federal government to work with Indigenous groups on researching the fates of missing children.
The office of Carolyn Bennett, the federal minister responsible for Indigenous relations, did not respond to a request for comment.
Lisa Lapointe, chief coroner of British Columbia, said in an email that her office was told about the radar findings on Thursday. “We are early in the process of gathering information and will continue to work collaboratively with the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc and others as this sensitive work progresses,” she said.
According to a research site operated by the University of British Columbia, Kamloops was once the largest residential school in Canada, with about 500 pupils at its peak.