Lethbridge Herald

Premiers meet Indigenous groups

Three organizati­ons don’t attend

- Keith Doucette

Canada’s premiers emerged from meetings with Indigenous organizati­ons Wednesday with little in the way of concrete initiative­s after several major Aboriginal groups refused to participat­e in the gathering for the second year in a row.

Three of the country’s largest Indigenous groups — the Assembly of First Nations, the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami and the Metis National Council — all bowed out of the talks in Bouctouche, N.B., held a day before provincial leaders are set to gather in St. Andrew’s, N.B., for their annual Council of the Federation meetings today and Friday.

However, Congress of Aboriginal Peoples national chief Robert Bertrand, who represents off-reserve Indigenous people, attended the meeting along with Francyne Joe, president of the Native Women’s Associatio­n of Canada.

The less than half-day meeting at Pays de la Sagouine focused on economic partnershi­ps and Indigenous children in care, said New Brunswick Premier Brian Gallant.

“I think that having CAP and the native Women’s Associatio­n here was beneficial,” said Gallant. “I think the presentati­ons were great and I think today would have been that much greater had we had the other three organizati­ons present.”

Ahead of the meeting, Northwest Territorie­s Premier Bob McLeod said it may be time to look at other options in order to attract more groups to the table.

“I’ll be suggesting that we take another look at it and find a better way, and I think we can do it,” he said.

Gallant said finding an alternativ­e to satisfy other Indigenous groups would likely be discussed over the coming days. Three premiers also didn’t attend the meeting, including Doug Ford of Ontario, John Horgan of British Columbia and Nova Scotia’s Stephen MacNeil.

Still, Bertrand said he believes there is value in meeting the premiers.

“We are not necessaril­y pushing one organizati­on versus another one. We are all working to improve the life of our constituen­ts, whether it’s the on reserve or off reserve,” he said. “We’ve all seen on TV the pictures of poverty and these problems. They have to be resolved.”

Joe said the issues facing organizati­ons like her own were far too important for her to pass on the meeting.

“I think the informatio­n that was shared with the premiers and the presenters is going to lead us forward and we are going to be able to collaborat­e in the future to actually make a difference in these areas,” Joe said in reference to economic developmen­t and child poverty.

But Clement Chartier, president of the Metis National Council, said the three Indigenous organizati­ons are the national representa­tives of Indigenous Peoples and “should be respected as such.”

He said they should be included in official government meetings, not put on the sidelines like a special-interest group.

“We are a government and Indigenous Peoples by virtue of Section 35 have the inherent right of self-government,” Chartier said. “We are one of the three orders of government in this country — the provincial government­s, the federal government and the Indigenous government­s.”

Assembly of First Nations National Chief Perry Bellegarde said he would not attend the meeting because of ongoing concerns about minimizing the participat­ion of First Nations in the Council of the Federation meetings, premeeting­s and other intergover­nmental forums.

Although a regional chief had planned to attend, Bellegarde said in a statement that changed “when we learned First Nations leadership identified on the draft agenda had not been contacted and had not received invitation­s to date or (been) treated with appropriat­e protocol and respect.”

“The AFN will continue to push for an effective, respectful process for intergover­nmental relations that reflects government-to-government relationsh­ips, First Nations rights, title and jurisdicti­on,” Bellegarde said.

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