Vancouver Sun

U.S. man has Canadian Indigenous rights

- GEMMA KARSTENS-SMITH

NELSON An American Indigenous man’s right to hunt in Canada has been upheld by a B.C. Supreme Court judge because his ancestors traditiona­lly hunted in this country.

Richard Desautel was charged under the Wildlife Act with hunting without a licence and hunting big game while not a resident of B.C. after he shot and killed an elk near Castlegar in 2010.

Desautel, a member of the Lakes Tribe in Washington state, argued in provincial court he was exercising his constituti­onal right to hunt for ceremonial purposes.

The Lakes Tribe was described in court as a “successor group” to the Sinixt people, who lived, hunted and gathered in the Kootenay region prior to first contact with European settlers. The provincial court acquitted the man in March, but the Crown appealed to the higher court, arguing Desautel is not an Aboriginal person of Canada and not entitled to rights under the constituti­on.

Desautel’s lawyer, Mark Underhill, said the argument goes back to a 1956 declaratio­n by the federal government that said the people of the small First Nation in the Kootenays were extinct.

For the Sinixt, that declaratio­n has “weighed on the collective psyche for generation­s,” Underhill said.

“What this case has been about from the outset is whether the Sinixt still legally exist and can possess constituti­onally protected rights. And that means everything for these folks,” he said in an interview.

In a written decision released Friday, Justice Robert Sewell dismissed the Crown’s appeal, saying Desautel’s tribe traditiona­lly lived on both sides of the border and has deep connection­s to its territory in Canada.

Desautel is an Aboriginal person of Canada and denying his Aboriginal rights would go against the idea of reconcilia­tion, Sewell says in the decision.

“In my view, it would be inconsiste­nt with that objective to deny a right to a group that occupied the land in question in pre-contact times and continued to actively use the territory for some years after the imposition of the internatio­nal boundary on them,” he says.

Sewell noted the term Aboriginal Peoples of Canada refers to people who occupied an area of what became Canada prior to first contact with Europeans.

Underhill said the decision is a clear statement that where First Nations come from is what counts, not citizenshi­p or internatio­nal borders.

Sinixt members may have moved to other places, but they remain deeply connected to their traditiona­l territory in southeaste­rn B.C., Underhill said.

Desautel said in a statement that he is “extremely pleased” with the decision, which he said upholds Indigenous traditions and natural laws.

Underhill said the Sinixt want to pursue reconcilia­tion and that includes further recognitio­n of their existence. He said that recognitio­n could include a welcome centre in Nelson, where visitors would learn about Sinixt history.

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