Lethbridge Herald

RCMP accused of letting down fishers

NOVA SCOTIA LOBSTER FISHERMEN EMBROILED IN DISPUTE OVER RIGHTS

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The RCMP in Nova Scotia have failed to properly protect Indigenous people embroiled in an ugly dispute over lobster fishing, Canada’s Indigenous services minister said Monday.

Marc Miller was one of four federal cabinet ministers who took part in a news conference that followed a turbulent weekend in the southweste­rn corner of the province, where a lobster pound was burned to the ground and the Mounties accused one person of assaulting a Mi’kmaq leader and another of setting fire to a van owned by an Indigenous fisherman.

“Indigenous people have been let down by the police, those who are sworn to protect them,” Miller said as he opened the news conference in Ottawa. “The protection of people on both sides has to prevail, and clearly that has not been the case up until now.”

Miller said even though Indigenous people have experience­d discrimina­tion throughout Canada’s history, the Indigenous fishers in Nova Scotia have stood up for their rights without resorting to violence.

“It is a testament to who they are that they do so peacefully,” Miller said. But he said he fears the violence could lead to loss of life, adding, “We must reach a resolution.”

Public Safety Minister Bill Blair said additional RCMP officers have been deployed to respond to the increasing­ly violent dispute, which started on Sept. 17 when the Sipekne’katik First Nation launched a self-regulated commercial fishery outside of the federally designated fishing season.

Blair said Nova Scotia RCMP are now able to draw on RCMP resources from other provinces within the Atlantic region.

“The RCMP reports that they have deployed ground resources, resources on the water, liaison teams and investigat­ive resources required to maintain the peace and uphold the law at that location,” Blair said.

He said there is a need for significan­t reform to how police work in Indigenous communitie­s. “I do acknowledg­e that there are concerns within

Indigenous communitie­s,” Blair said.

“We’re working hard to resolve them.”

The decision to dispatch more officers to Nova

Scotia follows complaints from Indigenous leaders who have pointed to images on social media that appear to show Mounties standing by while protesters vandalized property and allegedly assaulted Sipekne’katik Chief Mike Sack last week.

Miller made it clear that Ottawa will be taking action to ensure the Mi’kmaq can exercise their constituti­onally protected treaty right to earn a moderate livelihood from fishing.

“The acts of violence we have seen in the past days and weeks are disgusting, unacceptab­le and racist in nature,” he said.

“It is a disgrace to see these threats and acts of intimidati­on and violence take place in this country.”

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