Medicine Hat News

PM must renew commitment to reconcilia­tion with cabinet, Indigenous leaders urge

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

Indigenous leaders and New Democrats say naming a new cabinet is Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s chance to restore residentia­l school survivors’ confidence in his government’s commitment to reconcilia­tion.

At a news conference Monday, Charlie Angus was joined by a St. Anne’s residentia­l school survivor and two deputy grand chiefs the day before Trudeau is set to reveal his new cabinet picks.

The portfolios of Indigenous Services Canada and CrownIndig­enous Relations are currently held by Marc Miller and Carolyn

Bennett, respective­ly.

The appointmen­ts come amid louder calls for justice for residentia­l school survivors and for the federal government to drop its court battles against them, as well orders directing it to compensate First Nations children.

Friday is the deadline for when the Liberal government must decide whether to appeal a recent Federal Court decision confirming it should pay $40,000 to First Nations children and their parents or grandparen­ts. A human rights tribunal found Ottawa discrimina­ted against them by underfundi­ng child and family services on reserve.

Some 50,000 children could be eligible, meaning the federal government could be on the hook for billions of dollars in compensati­on.

The second ruling Ottawa has gone to court over involves expanding who can qualify for the measure known as Jordan’s Principle, which requires government­s to cover the cost of services for First Nations children and then resolve any jurisdicti­onal disputes later on.

“Canada is engaged in a broad review of the decision and will communicat­e its decision in due course,” Adrienne Vaupshas,

Miller’s press secretary, wrote in an email to The Canadian Press about the Federal Court’s ruling.

Angus says Trudeau

“has four days left to do the right thing for reconcilia­tion” and sit down with litigants instead of taking them back to court.

“We call upon the Canadian government, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, to comply with those orders. He has spent enough money fighting against us, fighting against our children,” said Anna Betty Achneepine­skum, deputy grand chief at Nishnawbe Aski Nation, which represents 49 First Nations in northern Ontario.

She said Bennett hasn’t lived up to the government’s mandate of reconcilia­tion with Indigenous Peoples and its relationsh­ip with them must be “strengthen­ed and honoured.”

Trudeau, too, has faced widespread criticism over his trip to Tofino, B.C., last month on Canada’s first National Day for Truth and Reconcilia­tion, designed to honour the

Indigenous children sent to government­funded, church-run residentia­l schools, where thousands of them died.

Also looming over Tuesday’s cabinet swearing-in is the finding earlier this year of hundreds of unmarked graves by First Nations in Saskatchew­an and B.C., at the former sites of residentia­l schools.

There have also been concerns expressed the Catholic Church hasn’t properly compensate­d survivors as part of the historic Indian Residentia­l Schools Settlement Agreement or that Pope Francis hasn’t apologized to survivors, as requested by the 2015 Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission of Canada’s final report, which outlined the abuses perpetuate­d against children sent to these schools.

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