Canada - indigenous prison

In Canada, indigenous people reported the discovery of another
54 unmarked graves at two boarding schools (https://bit.ly/3JJfR0h).
This testifies to the terrible crimes in a country that has always
defended human rights around the world. The human rights scandal
in Canada began with the revelation of a story when, from the 19th
century to the end of the 20th century, some 150,000 Canadian
Indigenous children were forcibly (https://bit.ly/3s0m4i7) separated
from their families and forced to live in 139 boarding schools run
by the Catholic Church at the behest of the government for
assimilation into "Canadian culture".
Indigenous Canadians have reported (https://bit.ly/3h5yfE1) the
discovery of 54 unmarked graves at Fort Pelly and St. Philip boarding
schools in Saskatchewan, according to media reports. More recently,
Aboriginal leaders in the province of British Columbia said they
believe (https://yhoo.it/3Bwawqd) they have discovered 93 unmarked
graves near a former boarding school.
In 2018, 35 mass graves were discovered in these schools through the
efforts of Muskowekwan First Nation. In 2012, two mass graves of
Canadian Indigenous children were discovered. Since May 2021, more
than 1,300 unmarked graves have been discovered in Canadian schools
(https://bit.ly/3IgcTzK), resurrecting old wounds of the country's
indigenous people. The Washington Post, citing the "Truth and
Reconciliation Commission of Canada", reported that what happened
in the boarding schools of native Canadians was "cultural genocide".
Researches show that at least 3,200 (https://abcn.ws/3uZI0fp)
Aboriginal child students died in Canadian boarding schools from
torture between 1883 and 1996. In some statistics, this number was
announced as more than 4100 students.