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Orange ribbons tied to a wrought iron fence outside a Winnipeg church. (Dreamstime)
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The remains of a second Indigenous woman murdered by a convicted serial killer have been found in a landfill in Manitoba, authorities confirmed Monday, after another victim’s remains were identified earlier this month.

Marcedes Myran was one of the Indigenous women slain three years ago by Jeremy Skibicki, who is serving multiple life sentences after being convicted of four murders last year.

Skibicki met his victims in homeless shelters, in a case seen as a symbol of the dangers faced by Indigenous women in Canada, where they disproportionately fall victim to violence, termed a “genocide” by a national public inquiry in 2019.

Testimony at Skibicki’s trial said he raped, killed and dismembered Myran and another woman, Morgan Harris, in 2022.

Authorities believed their remains were dumped at the Prairie Green Landfill site, north of Winnipeg, Man. They had been searching the site for months.

Last month, Manitoba authorities announced the discovery of two bodies.

Morgan Harris’s remains were identified on March 7.

RCMP in Manitoba on Monday confirmed the other set of “human remains found in the Prairie Green Landfill search have been identified as those of Marcedes Myran of Long Plain First Nation,” a statement said.

The families of Harris and Myran had pushed authorities in Manitoba to search for the bodies.

The body of another of Skibicki’s victims, Rebecca Contois, was found in a separate landfill and in a garbage bin, while the remains of a fourth unidentified victim in her 20s are still missing.

Indigenous women represent about one-fifth of all women killed in gender-related homicides in the country — despite comprising just five per cent of the female population.

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