China News Service, July 2nd. Comprehensive foreign media reported that on July 1, local time, a march broke out in Ottawa, Canada, to protest the recent discovery of unmarked graves on the site of the aboriginal boarding school.

Near the Parliament Building in Manitoba, Canada, a statue of Queen Victoria was overthrown by protesters.

Later, another smaller statue of Queen Elizabeth II of England was also torn down.

  According to a report by Canadian Television (CTV), on July 1, local time, protest marches broke out on Parliament Hill and downtown Ottawa. Thousands of people called for "cancel Canada Day."

The organizer of the march said in a statement that the rally was to "commemorate all the lives sacrificed for Canada."

  According to the British "Guardian" report, a statue of Queen Victoria was torn down near the Manitoba Parliament Building in Canada.

The protesters painted red handprints on the statue and left a slogan that read "We were once children. Take them home".

In addition, the demonstrators overthrew the smaller statue of Queen Elizabeth II.

The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) reported that a man was arrested by the police on the spot.

  According to previous reports, on June 30, local time, an aboriginal Indian tribe in Canada announced that 182 unmarked graves were found in a cemetery near the site of an aboriginal boarding school.

This is the third similar discovery involving the site of an aboriginal boarding school in Canada since late May.

  At the end of May, the Native Indian tribe in Kamloops, British Columbia, found the remains of 215 Native Indian children at a former boarding school site.

On June 24, the Native Indian tribe of Saskatchewan, an inland province, announced that 751 unmarked graves had been initially discovered near the site of a boarding school.

  After the founding of the Canadian Federation, a boarding school system was gradually established in an attempt to compulsorily "assimilate" the indigenous people.

The boarding school system has existed for more than a hundred years.

More than 150,000 aboriginal children were sent to boarding schools for isolation education, and thousands of children died while in school.