Penticton Herald

Top Indigenous priorities are climate, justice

- By MAAN ALHMIDI

Many Penticton Indian Band community members in British Columbia were used to looking out from their living room windows to see the city spread out across the Okanagan Valley. Now, they just see smoke.

“This is the smell of negligence on the part of both the federal and provincial government­s,” said Grand Chief Stewart Phillip of the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs.

He said his community and other Indigenous communitie­s in B.C. are now at risk of becoming climate crisis refugees like many other First Nations people who have lost their homes to wildfires in northern Prairie provinces and Ontario over the last two decades.

“We are in that drought situation here in British Columbia as well as Alberta and the Prairies,” he said.

“We have lost our crops here, in terms of the cherry harvest, and there are homes burning to the ground that people have invested their life’s work in.”

Phillip said he believes addressing the climate crisis, ending drinking water advisories, and implementi­ng the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission’s calls to action as well as the missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls’ inquiry’s calls for justice, are the fundamenta­l priorities for Indigenous Peoples during the election campaign.

He said the Liberals enjoyed enormous Indigenous support when they were first elected in 2015 after their leader Justin Trudeau made promises to improve their lives.

“Unfortunat­ely, it was long on sizzle and short on substance,” Phillip said.

“He said all the right things and made the appropriat­e promises. However, the government didn’t follow through.”

In 2015, Trudeau promised to lift all long-term drinking-water advisories by March 2021. His government acknowledg­ed in December that the deadline would be missed despite the lifting of more than 100 long-term drinking-water advisories in five years.

In March, the Liberal government said it remains committed to ending all the advisories but it won’t set a new deadline, as 50 long-term drinking-water advisories in 31 First Nations communitie­s are still in place.

The lack of progress on many of the TRC’s calls to action was highlighte­d in May after the findings of what are believed to be the remains of 215 children at the site of a Kamloops, B.C., residentia­l school.

Since then, several Indigenous communitie­s have announced that hundreds of unmarked graves have been located at the sites of former residentia­l schools.

In June, the Lower Kootenay Band in B.C. said a search using ground-penetratin­g radar had found what are believed to be human remains at a site close to a former residentia­l school in Cranbrook.

The Cowessess First Nation earlier said that ground-penetratin­g radar detected 751 unmarked graves at the former Marieval Indian Residentia­l School east of Regina, Sask.

Late last month, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh became the only federal party leader to meet with Indigenous chiefs at the site of the former Kamloops Indian School. He demanded that Trudeau make good on his six-year-old promise to fulfil all 94 calls to action of the TRC.

Singh was set to meet with the Cowessess First Nation on Friday.

The Conservati­ve, Bloc Quebecois, Green, and some Liberal MPs supported a non-binding NDP motion in Parliament in June calling on the Trudeau government

to drop legal actions against two Canadian Human Rights Tribunal orders on discrimina­tion against Indigenous children.

The motion also called on the Liberals to accelerate work on the TRC’s calls to action issued in 2015, including funding for investigat­ion into the deaths and disappeara­nces of children at residentia­l schools.

Last week, days before the election call, the Liberal government committed $321 million in new funding for programs that address some of the TRC’s calls to help Indigenous communitie­s search burial sites at former residentia­l schools and to support survivors.

The new money will fund searches of grave sites, help communitie­s manage the sites, provide mental health, cultural and emotional services and help build a national monument in Ottawa that honours the survivors and all the children who were lost.

Cindy Blackstock, a member of the Gitxsan First Nation in British Columbia and the executive director of the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada, said there shouldn’t be a limit to the amount of money given to Indigenous communitie­s to search for burial sites at residentia­l schools.

“They should be willing to pay whatever is necessary because the Canadian state perpetrate­d this,” she said.

Blackstock said Ottawa was “the command and control centre for residentia­l schools” and building one monument is not enough to honour the victims of these institutio­ns.

She said several markers across Ottawa should point out how residentia­l schools and colonial practices have harmed Indigenous Peoples.

“In that way you educate people about how pervasive colonialis­m and residentia­l schools were.”

She said the Liberals have had opportunit­ies and solutions to address the problems facing Indigenous Peoples, especially children, but “their implementa­tion has not been good.”

“Government­s are used to doing complicate­d things if they have their political will behind it. Where things stall is when they don’t really have the political will,” she said.

But David Chartrand of the Metis National Council said Metis communitie­s in Manitoba have seen advancemen­ts in child care, home ownership and repairs and economic investment­s since the Liberals came to power in 2015.

He said he will write letters to federal party leaders to ask about their positions on protecting the identity of the Red River Metis in Western Canada, their land claims, their lack of access to health care and business opportunit­ies and the treaty the Metis are negotiatin­g with Ottawa.

“We’ll ask them: ‘What’s your position on these specific major points?’ If you do not answer, we are advising all of our citizens of your answers.”’

“We have got a full scale of strategies right across Manitoba to get our vote out. We have phonecall systems, pickup systems set up. We have buses and vans if necessary. And we are going to haul our people to vote.”

 ??  ?? Grand Chief Stewart Phillip
Grand Chief Stewart Phillip

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