Penticton Herald

First Nation lays claim to downtown Ottawa, including Parliament Hill

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OTTAWA — A Quebec First Nation has filed a lawsuit seeking aboriginal title over much of downtown Ottawa, including Parliament Hill.

“The Algonquin Anishinabe Nation has never surrendere­d its title to the Kichi Sibi lands,” says the band’s statement of claim filed Wednesday in Ontario’s Superior Court.

The claim includes islands in the Ottawa River, as well as a long portion of its south bank that includes Parliament, the Supreme Court, the National Library and the Canadian War Museum. It stretches southwest along the river to include LeBreton Flats, federally owned land that is the proposed site for major new developmen­ts that could include a new hockey arena for the NHL’s Ottawa Senators.

That proposed developmen­t is a key reason why the lawsuit has been filed now, said Eamon Murphy, lawyer for the Anishinabe.

The band argues that the Anishinabe once used the land for fishing, hunting, farming and camping. It maintains the band not only used those lands, but controlled who had access to them.

“The Algonquin Anishinabe Nation controlled occupation and use of their lands ... through a variety of means which included arrangemen­ts for temporary possession, but also, in the absence of an arrangemen­t, sanctions of increasing severity up to and including death to any invader.”

The statement of claim says that, although the band signed agreements with various other First Nations and European countries, all those agreements were made on the basis of the band retaining its land. Since then, the band says, Canada has wrongly used and sold off that land.

“Canada and/or its agent (the National Capital Commission) have never compensate­d the Algonquin Anishinabe Nation for any of the federal interferen­ces, either fairly or at all.”

The lawsuit seeks to have the aboriginal title recognized. It also seeks negotiatio­ns with both the federal government and the province of Ontario, which is also named in the suit.

“Canada has a fiduciary duty to negotiate in good faith with the Algonquin Anishinabe Nation ... for reconcilia­tion of aboriginal title to the federal Kichi Sibi lands or any portion of them,” the lawsuit says.

None of the claims has been proven in court. A statement of defence has yet to be filed.

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