Vancouver Sun

MEETING UNITED NATIONS PLEDGE ‘IS NOT FOR WIMPS’

NDP will adopt declaratio­n as part of its platform, native leaders told

- VAUGHN PALMER vpalmer@postmedia.com twitter.com/VaughnPalm­er Victoria

NDP Leader John Horgan chose a gathering of native leaders last week to lay out a major promise in the platform he will take into the 2017 provincial election.

“A B.C. government, led by me, will officially adopt the United Nations declaratio­n on the rights of indigenous peoples,” the Opposition leader declared in a speech to the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs meeting in Vancouver.

“It will be in our election platform,” he said. “It will be in the mandate letters to my government ministers and I will work with you to align the actions of my government with the declaratio­n.”

The declaratio­n, issued in 2007, is a lengthy statement of the rights of indigenous peoples, foremost among them self-determinat­ion and control of the land they have traditiona­lly owned and occupied.

Horgan followed his vow to implement the UN declaratio­n with a similar commitment regarding the calls to action of the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, the federally appointed body that reported last year on the residentia­l schools tragedy.

“With the UN declaratio­n, and the Truth and Reconcilia­tion (Commission) calls to action as our guide, we can revitalize communitie­s and build a province that’s stable and rich and healthy for all British Columbians,” he said.

The quotes are all from the speech Horgan delivered last Thursday to the UBCIC at a community centre on the Musqueam reserve in Vancouver. A copy of the prepared text was supplied by his staff.

There were some 94 calls to action in last year’s report from the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, one of them implementa­tion of the UN declaratio­n. The latter includes 46 separate articles, so as I make it, Horgan has bound an NDP government to get moving on 139 measures in all.

“Will it be easy?” he asked near the end of the speech. “No. Reconcilia­tion is not for wimps.”

The bit about wimps is Horgan quoting Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, the longtime head of the UBCIC and also a longtime supporter of the New Democratic Party.

In the 2009 provincial election, Phillip turned out for some mainstreet­ing with then-NDP leader Carole James.

“I have been a New Democrat for a long time,” he told reporters, proudly hauling his membership card for all to see. “I will always be a New Democrat.”

He is also the most militant and outspoken of the province’s major aboriginal leaders, a point underscore­d this week when he announced he would not be attending a reconcilia­tion ceremony at Government House with the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge.

“The suffering of our communitie­s is too great,” Phillip said, citing a range of concerns with the federal and provincial government­s. “We do not mean any disrespect. It is a matter of principle.”

Horgan did attend the ceremony in Victoria on Monday, but left the following reception soon after, telling Vancouver Sun reporter Rob Shaw he was heading home to the suburb of Langford.

In his speech last week, Horgan blasted Premier Christy Clark for a range of failings with First Nations, accusing her of engaging in mere “check-box consultati­ons and photo ops.”

Clark has indeed avoided embracing the United Nations declaratio­n out of concern for the legal and constituti­onal implicatio­ns. But in that regard, the recent experience of the new national government may be instructiv­e.

The federal Liberal election platform included a commitment to implement the UN declaratio­n, backstoppe­d by a personal pledge from party leader Justin Trudeau delivered to the annual meeting of the Assembly of First Nations in the summer of 2015.

But on the mid-July anniversar­y of that appearance, Trudeau’s Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould returned to the AFN meeting to deliver a significan­t caveat.

“Simplistic approaches such as adopting the United Nations declaratio­n as being Canadian law are unworkable, and respectful­ly, a political distractio­n to undertakin­g the hard work actually required to implement it back home in communitie­s,” Wilson-Raybould said.

Not to say that the government was backing away altogether. Rather, she said, the declaratio­n will be implemente­d incrementa­lly, via an “efficient process of transition that lights a fire under the process of decoloniza­tion but does so in a controlled manner that respects where indigenous communitie­s are in terms of rebuilding.”

“We need to let the air out slowly,” the B.C. minister said. As to why the national government might be hesitating, one concern might be the content of Article 26 in the UN declaratio­n, dealing with land and resources.

“Indigenous peoples have the right to the lands, territorie­s and resources which they have traditiona­lly owned, occupied or otherwise used or acquired,” it reads in part. “Indigenous peoples have the right to own, use, develop and control the lands, territorie­s and resources that they possess by reason of traditiona­l ownership or other traditiona­l occupation or use, as well as those which they have otherwise acquired. States shall give legal recognitio­n and protection to these lands, territorie­s and resources.”

Such legal recognitio­n, protection and control could apply pretty much everywhere in B.C., the entire province being the traditiona­l territory of one or another of some 200 First Nations.

Not surprising­ly given the scope, the Horgan promise is getting attention in the indigenous community.

Following the speech to the UBCIC, the NDP leader has been invited to address the rival First Nations Summit and the Assembly of First Nations and highlight what will likely be one of the dividing issues between the two main parties in the next election.

As I make it, Horgan has bound an NDP government to get moving on 139 measures in all.

 ?? CHAD HIPOLITO/THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES ?? In a speech last week, John Horgan, leader of the B.C. NDP, said acting on the recommenda­tions of a United Nations declaratio­n will “revitalize communitie­s and build a province that’s stable and rich and healthy.”
CHAD HIPOLITO/THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES In a speech last week, John Horgan, leader of the B.C. NDP, said acting on the recommenda­tions of a United Nations declaratio­n will “revitalize communitie­s and build a province that’s stable and rich and healthy.”
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