Times Colonist

Trudeau laments Canada’s colonial legacy

Devotes UN speech to plight of Indigenous Peoples

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

UNITED NATIONS — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau used the brightest stage in internatio­nal politics to shine a light on the darkest corners of Canada’s story on Thursday, devoting a speech at the United Nations General Assembly to the plight of Canada’s Indigenous Peoples.

He spoke of forced migration, broken treaty promises and family separation­s via residentia­l schools. These left a devastatin­g legacy on reserves to this day, in a country whose very existence, he said, came without the consent and participat­ion of the Indigenous population­s who lived there for millennia.

“For Indigenous Peoples in Canada, the experience was mostly one of humiliatio­n, neglect and abuse,” he said.

“There are, today, children living on reserve in Canada who cannot safely drink, or bathe in, or even play in the water that comes out of their taps. There are Indigenous parents who say goodnight to their children, and have to cross their fingers in the hopes that their kids won’t run away, or take their own lives in the night. … And for far too many Indigenous women, life in Canada includes threats of violence so frequent and severe that Amnesty Internatio­nal has called it ‘a human-rights crisis.’

“That is the legacy of colonialis­m in Canada.”

It was the dominant theme of his address. He was asked later at a news conference why he dwelt so much on domestic issues and aired the country’s dirty laundry on a stage designed for internatio­nal crises such as North Korea, Syrian migration and atrocities against minorities in Myanmar.

Trudeau retorted that this is an internatio­nal issue.

The UN has just adopted a set of developmen­t goals for 2030, and No. 6 is universal access to clean drinking water. In his speech, Trudeau pointed out that Canada, one of the world’s wealthiest countries, has eliminated two dozen long-term drinking water advisories in Indigenous communitie­s and is still working on others.

He also described another way this intersects with internatio­nal affairs. When Canada tries to raise concerns about events elsewhere in the world, other countries quickly throw the aboriginal situation back. Other prime ministers have referred to similar exchanges abroad.

But Trudeau’s speech was also optimistic.

It looked ahead at a series of solutions: better infrastruc­ture on reserves, better housing, signing of the UN Declaratio­n on Indigenous Peoples and the dismantlin­g of the old Indian Affairs department.

“Canada remains a work in progress,” he said.

“For all the mistakes we’ve made, we remain hopeful.”

Trudeau used these examples to bolster his main point here at the UN this week: that Canada is ready to take on complex challenges, at home and abroad, and deserves a seat on the Security Council.

The rest of the speech focused on climate change, internatio­nal trade rules aimed at helping workers and his controvers­ial tax reform, which he cited as an example of his middle-classfrien­dly policies.

Trudeau drew applause when he promised to keep supporting the internatio­nal climate-change treaty.

Perry Bellegarde, national chief of the Assembly of First Nations, said: “When I watched, and I listened, and I read his speech, I thought: ‘If you want to be a leader on the world stage, you have to be honest with yourself and tell a country’s true and complete history.’

“That is what he did. … Get results now.”

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau addresses the United Nations General Assembly on Thursday.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau addresses the United Nations General Assembly on Thursday.

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