‘I prefer people be honest’: Quebec coroner urges witnesses at Echaquan inquest
MONTREAL — A Quebec coroner inquiring into the death of an Indigenous woman who filmed herself being humiliated by hospital staff implored health-care workers on Monday to be honest in their testimony.
Géhane Kamel expressed her admiration for front-line workers but urged witnesses to be upfront about the situation at the hospital as she heard from doctors and nurses who said they’d never heard complaints about mistreatment of Atikamekw patients.
Echaquan, a 37-year-old Atikamekw mother of seven, filmed herself last September at the hospital in Joliette, Que., northeast of Montreal, as female staff were heard insulting and mocking her shortly before she died. The video of her pleading for help and being ridiculed circulated widely on social media and prompted widespread indignation across the country.
The version the public inquiry heard from hospital staff contradicts testimony from Echaquan’s family members, who said last week that she and other people in the community feared going to the Joliette hospital for treatment.

