The Hamilton Spectator

Indigenous leaders question Quebec’s support for framework

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OTTAWA — First Nations leaders are welcoming Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s pledge to revamp the federal government’s relationsh­ip with Indigenous Peoples, but some Quebec chiefs fear their province’s obstructio­nist approach to self-determinat­ion could hinder the process.

Self-governance requires access to lands and resources, which falls under provincial jurisdicti­on, and Indigenous leaders have serious concerns about the willingnes­s of Quebec to go along with the federal government, said Ghislain Picard, regional head of the Assembly of First Nations for Quebec and Labrador.

“We were always faced with a (provincial) government that does as little as it can to advance this whole notion of Indigenous rights and Indigenous title,” Picard said, adding that some Indigenous groups in Quebec have been at the negotiatin­g table for up to 40 years.

Picard’s comments came following a meeting of Quebec and Labrador chiefs where several federal ministers shed more light on the government’s proposal to create a new legislativ­e framework aimed at recognizin­g and implementi­ng Indigenous rights. Carolyn Bennett, minister of Crown-Indigenous relations, said consultati­ons will include rethinking what constitute­s a nation, a term whose current definition dates back to the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples in the mid-1990s.

Quebec’s Indigenous affairs minister, Geoffrey Kelley, said his government had little warning before the framework was announced but is prepared to come to the table. “We only have the broad outline of what they intend on doing through the course of this year, but Quebec is more than willing to participat­e in this new approach,” he said in an interview.

Kelley defended his government’s track record on empowering Indigenous government­s, pointing to the school boards, health agencies and regional police forces that exist in some Cree and Inuit communitie­s. Quebec has a role to play in enhancing Indigenous autonomy within areas of provincial authority, including health, natural resources and education he said.

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