Masthead graphic based on a painting by Gudrun Thriemer.

Hot Topic

Loading...
Showing posts with label indigenous. Show all posts
Showing posts with label indigenous. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Helen Gabriel, "Québec Native Women's Association responds to Harper's apology for residential schools," Kahnawake, June 11, 2008.

...from Anna Carastathis at The Dominion

...while we commend the Canadian Government on the creation of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission we cannot ignore the Auditor General's recent report substantiating that budgets for child welfare agencies in Canada continue to focus the majority of their efforts on the placement of Aboriginal children outside their communities and Nations. This type of practice is reminiscent of the Residential School policy.

The Québec Native Women's Association has called upon the Canadian government to acknowledge that residential schools were an act of genocide.

Statement by Quebec Native Women's Association/Femmes Autochtones du Québec


Quebec Native Women recognizes the Prime Minister's official apology concerning the genocidal experience of Aboriginal people in the history of the Residential School system. While the apology to Aboriginal peoples is long overdue it is contradicted by the oppressive policies of the Indian Act.

The heinous crimes committed against Aboriginal children who were victims and survivors of the Residential School experience must be dealt with beyond mere apologies and monetary compensation.


Read the rest here =>

Ellen Gabriel is President of the Québec Native Women's AssociationRecommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Kahentinetha Horn, "Canada confesses to murder and rape of Indian people," Mohawk Nation News, June 11, 2008.

...from Brenda Norrell at Censored News.

[Stephen Harper would be surprised to learn what MNN thinks he has admitted to. -jlt]

SODOMY, PEDOPHILIA, GERM WARFARE, STERILIZATION, MEDICAL EXPERIMENTS AND WHO KNOWS MAYBE EVEN NECROPHILIA OF INDIGENOUS CHILDREN IN ORDER TO “STEAL” OUR LAND AND RESOURCES. This is a start. Now we have to deal with the bigger issues, sovereignty and resources.

Our people were kidnapped and held hostage for three to four generations. Genocide is taking children away and killing them. It was only a small part of a bigger story of “gangsterism” and greed. Don’t be fooled! That evil program is still in full swing. Canada has no intention to stop. They continue to drive us off our land, to criminalize us, incarcerate us and to refuse to return control of our land and resources to us.

We don’t like being lied to. Saying “sorry” doesn’t cut it. Canada practically admitted to “murder” and theft in the first degree.

While Prime Minister Harper was reciting his apology in the House of Commons, a permanent injunction was being granted to the city of Brantford to stop us from going onto our own lands to stop illegal development and to bring in the army if necessary. What forked-tongued two-faced hypocrisy!

Anywhere else in the world when a people are threatened with military force, it is a “declaration of war”. Every Canadian benefited from these crimes against humanity. They came here from Europe with empty hands.

Stephen Harper said, “We are planning to move on”. This means that the perpetrators of these heinous crimes have to be prosecuted in the international courts. More important, Canada is bound to the original relationship as “visitors” to our land who made promises to live peacefully under the Two Row Wampum Agreement. We are the land and resources owners and they have to negotiate with us to extend their stay.

Our future is tied to the Kaianereh’ko:wa, the law of Onowaregeh, Turtle Island. We cannot “bury the hatchet”! Planned murders of our children by the church and state cannot be pardoned anywhere. Canada broke international law to which they are bound.

At this moment illegal deals are being made by the government and its puppet band councils to deceive the people. Fraud and corruption is used to privatize under NAFTA every unsurrendered river and stream in British Columbia to send our water to California. Is this desperation because Canada and the U.S. or someone is trying to keep the colonial scam going?

Canada absolved the churches of responsibilities. The program to murder school children and to put them in unmarked graves was not random. All the churches , Catholic, Anglican, Presbyterian and United, stepped up to the plate to do dirty deeds for the state. It was part of the “pogram” to remove us completely to claim Onowaregeh, Turtle Island.

What kind of special education does it take to forget that it’s wrong to kill kids? Harper admitted they did not know our culture, our traditions and did not respect our basic human rights. They still don’t. Now that they have clearly admitted to being “busted”, shouldn’t the genocide stop? The colonizers must respect our sovereignty, identity and culture.

To start, they must stop all uranium and diamond mining, clear cutting and contamination of our environment. Stop trying to put us away in jails and holding cells to punish us for protecting the environment. Every single piece of Turtle Island, our resources and possessions must be returned to us so we can regenerate the natural beauty and health of Turtle Island. Nothing is going to change if they can help it.

To stop racism and lies the true history has to be taught in every school. Our education and language programs have to be improved. Clean water and decent homes have to be provided to all of us. All the elements that work together to demoralize our young people and incite them to commit suicides have to be stopped.

Canada is going to put up a monument as a symbol of this apology. Take down those hideous monuments to the true murderers of our people like Champlain, Humphrey Gilbert, Laverendrye, DeDenonville, Amherst and other scoundrels. Towns are still named after these mass murderers. Get rid of that depiction of the tied up Indian in bondage on the Clock Tower of the Parliament Buildings.

We cannot rebuild our nations on monuments or empty words. Real reconciliation means restoring the traditional homelands and resources of the various Indigenous people who have been dispossessed. Anything less is a farce.

Canada stage managed this performance. It was sickening to see colonial lap dog Phil Fontaine of the Assembly of First Nations accept Harper’s apology on our behalf. It was a pre-written script probably by government spinners.

We were never asked if we wanted him to accept this apology or to even accept it. The supporting remarks were made by the heads of colonially funded “puppy dog” organizations that jump to their “master’s” commands.

The money being offered to some of the victims is our own money. Any profit from our lands held in trust is “blood money”. We want an economy. Stop depriving us and forcing us out of our communities. Release all our trust funds immediately.

Everything that was “kicked back” to the Vatican must be returned to us. These churches that committed these atrocities have investments from our lands worth billions and have declared stock portfolios well over $100 million. Release these to us. Give us our funds that the Canadian government holds as “trust funds”, namely the “Indian Fund”, the “Consolidated Revenue Fund” and the “Contingent Liability Fund”.

All levels of government should stop issuing illegal permits for exploitation of our lands and resources. Stop using our land and resources as collateral to borrow on international money markets. The Queen and all the other “carpet baggers” who head the corporate criminal organizations that murder, rape and pillage us and our possessions should now be prosecuted in the international court for their crimes.

Our parents were threatened with imprisonment if they did not release their children to the control of the church and state. How long does it take to forget what our children saw – other children being murdered and even being forced to help bury them. They were deliberately given contagious diseases from which many died. There was out-and-out murder of over 50,000 at the hands of teachers, priests, nuns and staff. Our children were used in experiments by German doctors in the 1930’s and then disposed of. The children were threatened to never tell anyone about it.

It was the “I Apologize” Show, with Phil in a war bonnet, with smudging, all players with their scripts in hand and an audience seated strategically around. Someone on cue even yelled from the House of Commons gallery, “Way to go, Phil. You are our leader”.

This government sanctioned desperado is not our leader! The sanitized plot did not include murder, torture, sterilization, kids witnessing killings and medical experiments on them. You, the abusers, are in dire need of healing. In Australia the prime minister apologized to the Aborigines and they now live under a form of ‘martial law’! What will happen now when the army is brought in on us as happened in 1990?
Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Alex Peacemaker, "Neither Kootenays nor Kootenay," Express, April 23, 2008.

Immigrants come to Canada and receive the rights to a normal life while the Sinixt have no legal entitlement to a social insurance number, a medical care card or education for their children.

There was a letter in the Express ("Kootenay or Kootenays? Which is it?" March 19, 2008) wondering if the name of our region is the Kootenays or the West Kootenay.

Calling our region either the Kootenays or the West Kootenay is inaccurate. The original inhabitants--the Sinxt--for at least the last 9,000 years have called their territory Shwan'ix'qa which translates--in colonial lingo--as Upper Columbia River Basin.

The Kutenai Indians did not live here. Kutenai Territory is to the east of us between the Purcell and Rocky Mountain Ranges. The Okanagan Indians did not live here. Okanagan Territory is to the west of us between the Monashees and the Shuswap Highlands.

Why did the colonial machine hang this 'Kootenay' misnomer on the Shwan'ix'qa? Could it have something to do with the fact that the Sinixt are the 'Mother Tribe' of all the Salishan migrations and that a genocidal bounty was put on their heads--man, woman and child?

Could it have something to do with the Sinixt being the only native nation in Canada to be officially declared extinct by a Federal Order in Cabinet? Could this extinction order in 1956 have something to do with the governments of Canada and the USA ratifying the Columbia River Treaty carving up the water and hydroelectric resources of BC?

The Sinixt are not extinct and they continue to receive a bum deal. Immigrants come to Canada and receive the rights to a normal live while the Sinixt have no legal entitlement to a social insurance number, a medical care card or education for their children. It is unconscionable that the Sinixt are denied the legal right to work or access medical care and education on their own land--in the midst of Canadian prosperity.

I will leave further arguments for the court rooms and hopefully the school rooms of all who now enjoy the good life in the Shwan'ix'qa. Suffice to say it is a positive thing to know your real coordinates--both geographically and ethically.

If you can help the Siixt Peoples pass through 'extinction' please
contact: extinct1@telus.net
Prayers, legal assistance and material support of all types are gratefully appreciated.


Alex Peacemaker is an associate member of the Sinixt Nation Society.Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Saturday, June 14, 2008

Uri Avnery, "An Apology," June 14, 2008.




[We all know that much remains to be seen about Stephen Harper's historic apology to the residential school survivors. Not least of what remains to be resolved will have to be the inclusion of those Innu in Labrador who are not currently beneficiaries of the compensation program, but who are being evicted from land claimed by the government for itself. Still, the venerable Israeli peace activist, Uri Avnery, was inspired. It's a pity that the task of writing such a speech falls to him, mainly because it is in Israeli civil society and not the political class where the imagination and courage to do so is to be found. -jlt]

THIS WEEK, the Prime Minister of Canada made a dramatic statement in Parliament: he apologized to the indigenous peoples of his country for the injustices done to them for generations by successive Canadian governments.

This way, White Canada tries to make peace with the native nations, whose country their forefathers conquered and whose culture their rulers have tried to wipe out.

APOLOGIZING FOR past wrongs has become a part of modern political culture.

That is never an easy thing to do. Cynics might say: nothing to it. Just words. And words, after all, are a cheap commodity. But in fact, such acts have a profound significance. A human being - and even more so, a whole nation - always finds it hard to admit to iniquities performed and to atrocities committed. It means a rewriting of the historical narrative that forms the basis of their national cohesion. It necessitates a drastic change in the schoolbooks and in the national outlook. In general, governments are averse to this, because of the nationalistic demagogues and hate-mongers who infest every country.

The President of France has apologized on behalf of his people for the misdeeds of the Vichy regime, which turned Jews over to the Nazi exterminators. The Czech government has apologized to the Germans for the mass expulsion of the German population at the end of World War II. Germany, of course, has apologized to the Jews for the unspeakable crimes of the Holocaust. Quite recently, the government of Australia has apologized to the Aborigines. And even in Israel, a feeble effort was made to heal a grievous domestic wound, when Ehud Barak apologized to the Oriental Jews for the discrimination they have suffered for many years.

But we face a much more difficult and complex problem. It concerns the roots of our national existence in this country.

\

I BELIEVE that peace between us and the Palestinian people - a real peace, based on real conciliation - starts with an apology.

In my mind's eye I see the President of the State or the Prime Minister addressing a special extraordinary session of the Knesset and making a historic speech on the following lines:


MADAM SPEAKER, Honorable Knesset,

On behalf of the State of Israel and all its citizens, I address today the sons and daughters of the Palestinian people, wherever they are.

We recognize the fact that we have committed against you a historic injustice, and we humbly ask your forgiveness.

When the Zionist movement decided to establish a national home in this country, which we call Eretz Yisrael and you call Filastin, it had no intention of building our state on the ruins of another people. Indeed, almost no one in the Zionist movement had ever been in the country before the first Zionist Congress in 1897, or even had any idea about the actual situation here.

The burning desire of the founding fathers of this movement was to save the Jews of Europe, where the dark clouds of hatred for the Jews were gathering. In Eastern Europe, pogroms were raging, and all over Europe there were signs of the process that would eventually lead to the terrible Holocaust, in which six million Jews perished.

This basic aim attached itself to the profound devotion of the Jews, throughout the generations, to the country in which the Bible, the defining text of our people, was written, and to the city of Jerusalem, towards which the Jews have turned for thousands of years in their prayers.

The Zionist founders who came to this country were pioneers who carried in their hearts the most lofty ideals. They believed in national liberation, freedom, justice and equality. We are proud of them. They certainly did not dream of committing an injustice of historic dimensions.


ALL THIS does not justify what happened afterwards. The creation of the Jewish national home in this country has involved a profound injustice to you, the people who lived here for generations.

We cannot ignore anymore the fact that in the war of 1948 - which is the War of Independence for us, and the Naqba for you - some 750 thousand Palestinians were compelled to leave their homes and lands. As for the precise circumstances of this tragedy I propose the establishment of a "Committee for Truth and Reconciliation"' composed of experts from your and from our side, whose conclusions will from then on be incorporated in the schoolbooks, yours and ours.

We cannot ignore anymore the fact that for 60 years of conflict and war, you have been prevented from realizing your natural right to independence in your own free national state, a right confirmed by the United Nations General Assembly resolution of November 29, 1947, which also formed the legal basis for the establishment of the State of Israel.

For all this, we owe you an apology, and I express it hereby with all my heart.


The Bible tells us: "Whoso confesseth (his crimes) and forsakes them shall have mercy" (Proverbs 28:13). Clearly, confession does not suffice. We have also to forsake the wrongs we have done in the past.

It is impossible to turn the wheel of history back and restore the situation that existed in the country in 1947, much as Canada - or the United States, for that matter - cannot go back 200 years. We must build our common future on the joint desire to move forwards, to heal what can be healed and repair what can be repaired without inflicting new wounds, committing new injustices and causing more human tragedies.

I urge you to accept our apology in the spirit in which it is offered. Let us work together for a just, viable and practical solution of our century-old conflict - a solution that may not fulfill all justified aspirations nor right all wrongs, but which will allow both our peoples to live their lives in freedom, peace and prosperity.

This solution is clear for all to see. We all know what it is. It has emerged from our painful experiences, hammered out by the lessons of our sufferings, crystallized by the exertions of the best of our minds - yours as well as ours.

This solution means, simply: You have the same rights as we. We have the same rights as you: to live in a state of our own, under our own flag, governed by laws of our own making, ruled by a government freely elected by ourselves - hopefully a good one.

One of the fundamental commandments of our religion - as of yours and every other - was pronounced 2000 years ago by Rabbi Hillel: Do not unto others, what you do not want others to do to you.

This means in practice: your right to establish at once the free and sovereign State of Palestine in all the territories occupied by Israel in 1967, which will be accepted as a full member of the United Nations.

The borders of June 4, 1967, will be restored. I hope that we can agree, in free negotiations, to minimal exchanges of territory beneficial to both sides.

Jerusalem, which is so dear to all of us, must be the capital of both our states - West Jerusalem, including the Western Wall, the capital of Israel, East Jerusalem, including al-Haram al-Sharif, which we call the Temple Mount, the capital of Palestine. What is Arab shall be yours, what is Jewish shall be ours. Let us work together to keep the city, as a living reality, open and united.

We shall evacuate the Israeli settlements, which have caused so much suffering and iniquities to you, and bring the settlers home, except from those small areas which will be joined to Israel in the framework of freely agreed swaps of territory. We shall also dismantle all the paraphernalia of the occupation, both physical and institutional.

We must approach with open hearts, compassion and common sense, the task of finding a just and viable solution for the terrible tragedy of the refugees and their decendants. Each refugee family must be granted a free choice between the various solutions: repatriation and resettlement in the State of Palestine, with generous assistance; staying where they are or emigration to any country of their choice, also with generous assistance; and yes - coming back to the territory of Israel in acceptable numbers, agreed by us. The refugees themselves must be a full partner in all our efforts.

I trust that our two states - Israel and Palestine, living side by side in this beloved but small country, will quickly come together on the human, social, economic, technological and cultural levels, creating a relationship that will not only guarantee our security, but also rapid development and prosperity for all.

Together we will work for peace and prosperity throughout our region, based on close relations with all the countries of the area.

Committed to peace and vowing to create a better future for our children and grandchildren, let us rise to our feet and bow our heads in memory of the countless victims of our conflict, Jews and Arabs, Israelis and Palestinians - a conflict that has lasted far too long.



SUCH A SPEECH is, to my mind, absolutely essential for opening a new chapter in the history of this country.

In decades of meeting with Palestinians of all walks of life, I have come to the conclusion that the emotional aspects of the conflict are no less - and perhaps even more - important than the political ones. A profound sense of injustice permeates the minds and actions of all Palestinians. Unconscious or half-conscious guilt feelings are troubling the souls of the Israelis, creating a deep conviction that Arabs will never make peace with us.

I do not know when such a speech will be possible. Many imponderable factors will have an impact on that. But I do know that without it, mere peace agreements, reached between haggling diplomats, will not suffice. As the Oslo agreements have shown, building an artificial island in a sea of stormy emotions just will not do.


THE PUBLIC apology by the Canadian Prime Minister is not the only thing we can learn from that North American country.

43 years ago, the Canadian government took an extraordinary step in order to make peace between the English-speaking majority and the French-speaking minority among their citizens. That relationship had remained an open wound from the time the British conquered French Canada some 250 years ago. It was decided to replace the Canadian national flag, which was based on the British "Union Jack", with a completely new national flag, featuring the maple leaf.

On this occasion, the Speaker of the Senate said: "The flag is the symbol of the nation's unity, for it, beyond any doubt, represents all the citizens of Canada without distinction of race, language, belief or opinion."

We can learn something from that, too.
Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Tuesday, June 03, 2008

Franz Chavez, "Bolivia: Indigenous leaders beaten and publicly humiliated," Green Left Online, May 31, 2008.

In the city’s main square, they were forced to kneel — shirtless — and apologise for coming to Sucre. They were also made to chant insults like “Die Evo!”


Bolivia may have its first-ever indigenous president, but racism is alive and well in this country, as demonstrated by the public humiliation of a group of around 50 indigenous mayors, town councillors and community leaders in the south-central city of Sucre.

The incident, which shook the country but received little attention from the international press, occurred on May 25, when President Evo Morales, an Aymara Indian, was to appear in a public ceremony in Sucre to deliver 50 ambulances for rural communities and announce funding for municipal projects.

But in the early hours of May 25, organised groups opposed to Morales began to surround the stadium where he was to appear. Confronting the police and soldiers with sticks, stones and dynamite, they managed to occupy the stadium.

The president cancelled his visit, and the security forces were withdrawn to avoid bloodshed.

Read the rest here =>

Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Traditional Squamish Chief removed by taser-armed RCMP in Vancouver

from Brenda Norrell at Censored News

Squamish Nation territory ("Vancouver, Canada")
May 24, 2008

A force of twenty taser-armed RCMP officers and band council police forced Chief Kiapilano off his own land yesterday during a peaceful occupation of the Squamish band council office by Kiapilano and his supporters. Posted by Mohawk Network News

On Friday morning, May 23rd, Hereditary Squamish Chief Kiapilano and a dozen supporters had swiftly occupied the offices of the state-funded "Squamish Band Council" in North Vancouver, and ordered the eviction of the entire band council.

For more information: 1-888-265-1007 (Canada)

Squamish Nation Press Release May 23 2008 here =>

May 25, 2008 Feature story on Federation of Sovereign Nations website =>

Read news updates:

Mowhawk Network News

Federation of Sovereign Nations

Censored News
Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Judy Rebick, "Indigenous People Defending Their Land and Our Environment," May 25, 2008.

Recommended by Grant Clubine

Judy Rebick's ZSpace Page / ZSpace

On Monday May 26, Indigenous people will gather from across Ontario, including the remote North, on the lawns of Queen's Park to insist that governments and industry recognize their right to say no to mining and forestry on their lands. Travelling by bus and even by foot, they are coming to participate in four days of sacred ceremonies, teach-ins, drumming, music, readings and a mass rally that they are calling a Gathering of Mother Earth Protectors.

In a sign of what is to come Aboriginal people are not only standing up for their rights , they are defending the environment against unbridled industrial development. Across the Americas, from Brazil to Bolivia to the Boreal Forest in Northwestern Ontario, Indigenous people are leading the way to a more sustainable future and a more democratic political system that roots out the vestiges of colonialism. Here in Toronto environmentalists are joining with unions, students, churches, urban Aboriginal, children's rights, anti-poverty and immigrant groups to support them. All of us are working under the leadership of three Indigenous communities who have put themselves on the line to demand respect for their inherent rights and changes to the law to protect the environment. They are Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug , known as KI, Ardoch Algonguin First Nation and Grassy Narrows and they are willing to go to jail if necessary to protect the land for future generations.

Two of the three communities sponsoring the events have leaders in jail for contempt of court because they refused drilling on their land without permission. Retired Ardoch Algonquin chief and university professor Bob Lovelace was sentenced to six months in jail three months ago. He started a hunger strike last week and now is suffering solitary confinement.

Six leaders from the community of Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug, known as the KI Six, were also thrown in jail for peacefully opposing mineral exploration on their lands in the Boreal Forest (located 600km north of Thunder Bay). This isolated community has been completely devastated by the jailing of most of their leaders.

In an interview from jail with Indian Country Today Bob Lovelace said: "You know, the longer I sit in here, and the longer I think about these things, it irks me that really great minds of this generation have been wasted and just squandered on a relationship where colonialism runs the show."

While jailing of Indigenous activists is nothing new, this is the first time that a Chief In Council, Donny Morris of KI, the official leader of the community as recognized by the Indian Act, has been jailed for following the laws protecting Indigenous rights.

The excuse given by the Ontario government is the archaic Mining Act that places industrial development over everything. Mining companies are given automatic license to explore wherever they want without First Nations approval, without an environmental assessment, without even the permission of the owners of private property. Premier Dalton McGuinty under pressure from growing public support for Bob Lovelace and the KI Six has said he will amend the Mining Act. But requests for a moratorium on drilling so that the leaders can be released from jail have gone unheeded. In a sign of the pressure that the mining company Platinex is feeling they agreed to stop drilling until the appeal so that the KI 6 could come out of jail until their appeal on May 28th. The KI 6 will attend the rally.

In an interview from jail Chief Donny Morris said, "When you think of when the settlers first came, they tried to slaughter us. Why? For the mineral riches on our land like gold and now it is happening again. I have been thinking about what it means that non-Indians are organizing all this support for us. I am thinking about that a lot here. I haven't seen this kind of thing in the past. It's like all of you are becoming Indians. The Canadian government tried to assimilate us for generations and now it is the opposite that is happening. You are all starting to think like us about the earth."

Grassy Narrows, who have been waging a decades long battle to protect their land from clear cutting and their water from mercury poisoning, are joining the other two communities in sponsoring the Gathering. Twenty-two young people from Grassy Narrows will arrive in Toronto on Monday at the end of an 1800 km walk from Kenora they are calling the Protecting the Earth Walk.

The four days of activities will start with a welcome rally late Monday afternoon at Queen's Park and culminate in a march to recognize the Aboriginal Day of Action called by the Assembly of First Nations.


Judy Rebick and Judy Finlay are both professors at Ryerson University with a long history supporting social justice and equality for women and children.Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Friday, May 23, 2008

Praful Bidwai, "Top Activist's Detention Blot on Democracy in India," IPS.

NEW DELHI, May 15 (IPS) - Protests are mounting all over the world against the year-long detention of Dr. Binayak Sen, a distinguished Indian human rights and health activist, under draconian laws in the central state of Chhattisgarh.

Sen, national vice president and Chhattisgarh general secretary of the well-known People's Union of Civil Liberties (PUCL), was arrested under allegations of helping left-wing extremists, known in this country as Naxalites.

The charges shocked human rights organisations and citizens’ groups, which on independent investigation, have found them totally fictitious. They believe that the Chhattisgarh government filed them to harass Sen and set a horribly negative example for all civil liberties activists and intimidate them.

Sen is probably India’s first human rights defender to have faced such prolonged detention.

Sen’s detention raises serious questions about the content and quality of democracy in India, and the state’s failure to respect liberties and fundamental rights guaranteed by the Constitution. It also points to links between human rights violations and the government’s social and economic policies.

[This article provides numerous points of entry into an understanding of the Adivasi movement in India, the program of the Salwa Judum paramilitaries, the Naxalites who are their targets. It goes on to describe global vigils and demonstrations on behalf of Dr Sen, and a campaign by 22 Nobel Laureates to have him freed. Anyone who sees India as a rising global power and the world's largest democracy will likely find this article interesting. Praful Bidwai writes a regular column for Antiwar.com.

Read the rest here =>

The People's Union for Civil Liberties is the largest and oldest human rights organization in India. Their most recent article about Dr. Sen

See also =>

Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Jennifer David, "Aboriginal language broadcasting in Canada," for APTN by Debwe Communications, November 2004. (pdf, 45pp)

from the "Executive Summary"

Background

The Task Force on Aboriginal Languages and Cultures was established in 2002 by the then Minister of Canadian Heritage, Sheila Copps. It was created as part of an initiative to revitalize and promote Aboriginal languages and cultures. A three-phase action plan was developed, with funding of $172.5 M over 11 years. The first phase is a continuation of the Aboriginal Languages Initiative. The establishment of the Task Force is the second phase.

The ten members of the Task Force are responsible for developing recommendations to guide the creation of a new Aboriginal Languages and Cultures Centre, which will
represent the third phase of the initiative. To support development of these
recommendations, the Task Force has been holding consultations, listening to
presentations, and commissioning research reports.

The Aboriginal Peoples Television Network (APTN) was asked to prepare an analysis of the role of Aboriginal language broadcasting in the revitalization of Aboriginal languages across Canada. Jennifer David of Debwe Communications Inc. was contracted to prepare the report, based on documents reviews, analysis and interviews, for submission by APTN to the Task Force on Aboriginal Languages and Cultures.

Summary of Key Issues

Broadcasting has a vital role to play in the revitalization and survival of Aboriginal languages. This, however, is often an overlooked area of language learning, and much more research must be done to quantitatively confirm the positive impact of broadcasting on language use and fluency.

There is no significant legislative protection for Aboriginal language broadcasting, rendering long-term planning impossible, engendering a sense of "second class citizens" among broadcasters, and, in some cases, denying Aboriginal broadcasters the opportunity to provide quality programming.

Some Government support exists for northern Aboriginal communications societies, under the Northern Native Broadcast Access Program (NNBAP). There are, however, other radio stations outside this umbrella that provide a valuable service in Aboriginal languages, but are not provided with adequate financial support.

Many radio stations are unable to conclusively identify the needs of their listeners. Most cannot afford to conduct meaningful audience surveys that could lead to more appropriate and successful programming and help establish corporate policies regarding Aboriginal language programming.

While the majority of Aboriginal language speakers are older, there are efforts to encourage more Aboriginal youth to speak their language. These youth are largely unaware of the opportunities for full time employment and a lifelong career that exist in Aboriginal Language Broadcasting In Canada broadcasting industry, a sector where fluency in an Aboriginal language is an important asset.

Broadcasters represent an important cultural and historical resource of archival information, including interviews with elders and several generations of political leadership, and discussions about and in various Aboriginal languages. Most radio stations and television producers are unable to keep and catalogue this valuable and irreplaceable asset, and it is slowly being lost to future generations.

Aboriginal language broadcasting has wide-reaching appeal, and attracts growing Aboriginal and mainstream audiences across Canada and internationally. The potential of both radio and TV, however, has not yet been fully tapped. Tapes of shows or CD’s of language interviews, for example, are not being widely used in other contexts to assist in revitalizing Aboriginal languages. There are some exceptions to this; but generally, Aboriginal media represent a sadly under-utilized resource for language learning.

There is currently no organization or association that would enable all Aboriginal broadcasters to meet, network and find common ground to address common issues. There is no national voice for Aboriginal broadcasters, nor is there any mechanism by which the broadcasters could work together on joint research projects or undertake valuable surveys. Such an association would be beneficial for Aboriginal-language initiatives.

Read the report, including recommendations, here =>
Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Friday, May 09, 2008

PhotoPhormations, "Banished in Burma," Cultural Survival Quarterly, Issue 32.1, April 1, 2008.

Attacks on indigenous people outside of Rangoon go largely unreported by the media. This 12-page pdf presents a collection of photos taken in the Karen state in 2007 along with a written introduction.

The Mon, Shan, Karen, and Karenni people are particularly targeted by the the Tatmadaw (the Burmese military). The Free Burmese Rangers train groups to provide medical relief, counselling, and aid to the internally displaced.

See the photos, read the intro =>
Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Friday, April 25, 2008

"Aboriginal Peoples Declare Canada's UN Statement Grave Disappointment for Aboriginal Peoples on Climate Change," April 23, 2008.

[Links added. If anyone reading this knows of a website for the Indigenous Network on the Environment and Trade, please contact worldreport at cjly.net. -jlt]

Press Release

UNITED NATIONS, NY - The statement delivered by the Canadian government yesterday to the United Nations Permanent Forum (UNPFII) on Indigenous Issues was a grave disappointment to the Indigenous representatives attending the UNPFII's special session on climate change because "it does not address Indigenous Peoples' rights, needs and priorities in real climate change solutions," according to Indigenous Environmental Network director Tom Goldtooth.

Other groups represented include the Assembly of First Nations (AFN), Confederacy of Treaty 6 First Nations, the International Indian Treaty Council, the Indigenous Network on the Environment and Trade, the Native Women's Association of Canada (NWAC) and the British Colombia First Nations Leadership Council.

"What the statement shows is how little the government cares to deal with climate change's effects or stopping climate change. They announced their plan to reduce 2006 greenhouse gas levels by 20% in 2020, but this is too little too late, and will only mean further devastation to our peoples," said Ben Powless (Mohawk) of the Indigenous Environmental Network.

Current impacts on First Nations communities were also left out. Grand Chief Edward John (Carrier Sekani) of the BC First Nations Leadership Council stated, "Canada is ignoring the devastating impacts of the mountain pine beetle on the lands, territories and resources of First Nations in BC." "Canada has stated that it is committed with us on climate change, so we call upon Canada to ensure the full participation of Indigenous Peoples in all domestic and international climate change discussions, initiatives and negotiations," concurred AFN National Chief Phil Fontaine.

Also evident was Canada's unilateral approach of dealing with Indigenous Peoples after they begin to have problems. "Canada is happy to pour more and more money into studying us and how we adapt to climate change, but not with addressing environmental issues at their source," stated Beverley Jacobs, President, NWAC. "They are now telling us they take traditional knowledge seriously, but that they would never consider implementing it themselves. These continued, seriously misguided federal policies are going to be the death of us," warned Arthur Manuel (Secwepmc) of the Indigenous Network on the Environment and Trade.

This comes after dramatic action was called for by Indigenous participants attending the forum. A representative of the Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug Nation [Big Trout Lake First Nation -jlt] made a presentation to the forum attesting to the fact that her community's elected leadership had been jailed for opposition to destructive mining in their community. Elected representatives of Aboriginal communities surrounding the Tar Sands were also attending to detest the destructive practices upsetting their homelands.

For more information please contact:

Gina Cosentino, AFN: (613) 241 6789 x356
Grand Chief Edward John: (778) 772 8218
Arthur Manuel: (250) 319-0688

The Permanent Forum is meeting from April 21 to May 2, 2008 at the UN in New York. This is its 7th session since starting in 2002. This year the forum was opened by Bolivian President Evo Morales. For more information please see http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/unpfii/index.html
Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Friday, April 18, 2008

Uprising in Tibet: What is it like?

[One way of viewing the Lhasa riots and the anti-Olympics campaign, is that the Tibetans have a land claim which requires negotiation. If, as Phil Fontaine suggests, the plight of Canadian First Nations is strongly analogous to that of the Tibetans, then it might be reasonable to ask, what is it like? Oka? Ipperwash? New Caledonia?

I'd like to suggest that the closest analogy in recent times is a heavily underreported incident known as the Gustafsen Lake standoff, also known as the Ts'Peten Standoff. Both the similitaries and the differences are worth considering. -jlt]

OTTAWA -- Canadian native groups might highlight the "desperate conditions" in their communities with protests during Vancouver's 2010 Olympics similar to this year's pro-Tibet demonstrations, First Nations leader Phil Fontaine warned Thursday.

This despite a memorandum of understanding with Vancouver's Olympics Committee (VANOC) signed by Mr. Fontaine and the Four Host First Nations last summer.

"What that speaks to is the desperate situation in our communities," said MR. Fontaine, Grand Chief of the Assembly of First Nations. "We find the Tibet situation compelling. The Tibetans are disenfranchised people. The situation here is similar, but it's different in this sense - the poverty we're talking about exists in Canada's own backyard.

"It's OK to express outrage with the Chinese government's position against Tibet, but [Canadians] should be just as outraged, if not more so . . . with what is being done to First Nations here."

[...]




Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Thursday, April 10, 2008

"Navajo peace diplomat selected for Iran," Censored News, Monday, April 7, 2008

Navajo selected as peace diplomat for delegation to Iran

Michelle Cook is a community worker, spiritual activist, and a recent graduate from the University of Arizona with a B.A. in Women's Studies and American Indian Studies. She has advocated for the rights and well being of indigenous peoples and communities both domestically and internationally including the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues. Michelle is an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation born of the Walk Around Clan and Close to the Water's Edge Clan. She currently resides with her grandmother in Oak Springs Arizona.

Michelle has recently been selected by the Fellowship of Reconciliation (F.O.R) to participate as a civilian diplomat on a Peace and Friendship Delegation to Iran. This fact-finding mission hopes to shed light on and prevent a potential war between the United States and Iran. This is her story and journey.
Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Friday, April 04, 2008

"Navajos won't allow uranium mining, President tells Congressional subcommittee," March 30, 2008.

NAVAJO PRESIDENT JOE SHIRLEY, JR., TELLS CONGRESSIONAL SUBCOMMITTEE
NATION WILL NOT WATCH ANOTHER GENERATION HARMED BY URANIUM MINING

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. – Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley, Jr., told a Congressional subcommittee here Friday that the Navajo Nation remains opposed to uranium mining on or near its land, and will take whatever action necessary to prevent it.

"It is unconscionable to me that the federal government would consider allowing uranium mining to be restarted anywhere near the Navajo Nation when we are still suffering from previous mining activities," he said. "In response to attempts to renew uranium mining, the Navajo Nation Council passed, and I signed into law, the Diné Natural Resources Protection Act. This law places a ban on all uranium mining both within the Navajo Nation boundary, and within Navajo Indian Country."

Testifying at a joint oversight hearing before the Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests and Public Lands at the Flagstaff City Council Chambers, President Shirley said Navajos "do not want to not sit by, ignorant of the effects of uranium mining, only to watch another generation of mothers and fathers die."

"We are doing everything we can to speak out and do something about it," he said. "We do not want a new generation of babies born with birth defects. We will not allow our people to live with cancers and other disorders as faceless companies make profits only to declare bankruptcy and then walk away from the damage they have caused, regardless of the bond they have in place."

The hearing was held to gather testimony on "Community Impacts of Proposed Uranium Mining Near Grand Canyon National Park." In December 2007, the U.S. Forest Service authorized VANE Minerals, LLC, to conduct exploratory drilling for uranium three miles south of Grand Canyon National Park. The Park Service used Categorical Exclusion Category 8 to approve the drilling, which covers short-term investigations and which had limited public involvement. Consultation with tribes amounted to sending a letter.

On March 6, Subcommittee Chairman Congressman Raul Grijalva wrote to U.S. Agriculture Secretary Ed Schafer to ask that the Forest Service re-initiate the process "to ensure a more rigorous public involvement and environmental analysis process."

About 200 people filled the council chamber at the Flagstaff City Hall. Also presenting testimony during the first morning panel with President Shirley was Kaibab Paiute Tribal Chairwoman Ono Segundo and Havasupai Tribal Chairman Don Watahomigie. Both also testified that their tribes are opposed to renewed uranium mining in and around the Grand Canyon region.

Appearing with Congressman Grijalva was Arizona Congressman Ed Pastor and California Congresswoman Grace Napolitano.

President Shirley said that as the Cold War raged more than 50 years ago, the United States government began a massive effort to mine and process uranium ore for use in the country's nuclear weapons programs. Much of that uranium was mined on or near Navajo lands by Navajo hands.

"Today, the legacy of uranium mining continues to devastate both the people and the land," he said. "The workers, their families, and their neighbors suffer increased incidences of cancers and other medical disorders caused by their exposure to uranium. Fathers and sons who went to work in the mines and the processing facilities brought uranium dust into their homes to unknowingly expose their families to radiation."

"The mines, many simply abandoned, have left open open scars in the ground with leaking radioactive waste. The companies that processed the uranium ore dumped their waste in open – and in some cases unauthorized – pits, exposing both the soil and the water to radiation."

Asked by Congressman Pastor whether the Navajo Nation sees any benefits to come from uranium mining, President Shirley the opposite has been true in the past.

"Many of my people have died. Many of my medicine people have died, Congressman," he said. "And as a result, our culture has gone away, some of it. Some of the medicine people with the knowledge they have, when they go on, it's just like a library has gone on. You lose a lot of culture. That has happened to my people."

He said the tragedy of uranium's legacy extends not only to those who worked in the mines but to those who worked and lived near the mines that also experienced devastating illnesses. Decades later, families who live in those same areas continue to experience health problems.

"The remnants of uranium activity continue to pollute our land, our water, and our lives," he said. "It would be unforgivable to allow this cycle to continue for another generation."

He explained that in recent years, many companies have approached the Navajo Nation with promises of riches.

"They have promised us newer and cleaner methods of mining that they say will not harm the land, the water, or the people," he said. "We have repeatedly declined their offers."

He said the Nation has been told that in situ leach mining is a process that injects a solution into the ground to separate the ore from the surrounding rock.

"These companies claim the process is harmless," President Shirley said. "The science on this process is, at best, inconclusive, and, at worst, points to increased radioactive contaminants in the groundwater after the mining operations cease."

He said he cannot believe the claims of safety "when history and science establish a different record."

"The Navajo people have been consistently lied to by companies and government officials concerning the effects of various mining activities. Unfortunately, the true cost of these activities is understood only later when the companies have stolen away with their profits leaving the Navajo people to bear the health burdens."

Asked by whether he was contacted by the Forest Service about allowing VANE to conduct exploratory drilling near the Grand Canyon, President Shirley said no. He added that any Navajo official or division director who may have been contacted would have given the Forest Service the same answer.

"Every testimony coming from the Navajo Nation, whether it's through me, any of our council delegates, any of our legislators, it's no, we do not want the further mining of the uranium ore on Navajoland or on land contiguous to Navajoland," he said. "So if there's any conversation that took place with any of the U.S. Forest representatives, that's what they've heard."

"We just don't want it," he said. "We have a law in place, and that's the Diné Natural Resources Protection Act that says no way will we allow, no way will the Navajo Nation or any of its departments or any of its staff allow the further mining of uranium ore on Navajo land."

# # #
PHOTOS, AUDIO AVAILABLE

CONTACT
George Hardeen, Communications Director
Office of the President & Vice President
The Navajo Nation
DESK 928-871-7917
CELL 928-309-8532
pressoffice@opvp.org

Alfred Meyer, Program Director
Alliance for Nuclear Accountability
322 4th Street NE
Washington, DC 20002

202-544-0217
202-544-6143 fax
www.ananuclear.org
ameyerananuclear.org

Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

KI First Nation court ruling has serious implications for the human rights of First Nations, Matawa First Nations, March 24, 2008.

THUNDER BAY, ON, March 24 /CNW/ - The sentencing of six members of Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug First Nation (KI) to six months in jail has caused widespread indignation among the people of Matawa First Nations. The Chiefs of Matawa First Nations called an urgent meeting today to discuss the very serious implications of the Thunder Bay Superior Court decision and to determine the future relationship between their communities and the Province of Ontario.

"As leaders, individuals and families, the people of Matawa First Nations have been deeply offended and shocked by this week's ruling against KI," says Matawa First Nations spokesperson, Chief Arthur Moore. "This decision has been received as a clear message from the Government of Ontario that they have no respect for the First Nations people of Ontario and that they give no consideration to our lives or rights as citizens. It is a shameful time for this country on the world stage and one that will have very serious implications for future relations between government, industry and First Nations."

Matawa First Nations are pro-development communities located in Northern Ontario. They have been exploring partnerships with mining companies for economic development opportunities in their traditional territories. Earlier this month, Matawa First Nations were the only Aboriginal communities represented at the Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada (PDAC) conference.

"Matawa First Nations have been proactive in building relationships with mining companies wishing to undertake exploration in our traditional territories thus far," continued Chief Moore. "However, we depend on working relationships that are based on cooperation, respectful use of traditional territories and meaningful consultation with our community members related to lands and natural resources. Now that Ontario has undermined the requirement for industry to engage in a process of consultation with our First Nations, our relationships with the mining industry have been seriously jeopardized and future relationships are doubtful to occur," he says.

The First Nations foremost focus is, and has been, to secure a prosperous future for their youth and the generations to come. They want pro-active negotiations with the government to take place so that their youth are not left scarred by current events and can see a future in the mineral employment sector. Matawa First Nations' goal in this ordeal is to leave the First Nations youth with zero negative social and economic impacts.

Matawa First Nations are enormously fearful of the implications of this week's court decision. Chief Moore says; "Our community members are rightfully afraid for their lands and for the future of our families and communities. We depend on the resources of our lands everyday for food, for water, to live. We now have no protection against companies who wish to enter our territories to exploit and ruin our lands for their own economic gain. We are just like any other Ontario residents who would want to be protected or at the very least consulted about the intentions of developers entering their own backyards."

From the political perspective, the Matawa Chiefs have never supported, participated in or received funding from the Nishnawbe-Aski Nation Northern Table (NAN - Ontario Bilateral Process). Matawa First Nations is however seeking a Consultation and Accommodation Protocol with Ontario so that future situations do not spiral out of control like that at K.I.

Matawa First Nations are a Tribal Council of ten communities located in
the Nishnawbe Aski Nation; Aroland, Constance Lake, Eabametoong, Ginoogaming,
Hornepayne, Long Lake No. 58, Marten Falls, Neskantaga, Nibinamik, and
Webequie First Nations.

For further information: Media Contact: Stephanie Ash, Communications
Officer, Matawa First Nations, Tel: (807) 767-4443, Fax: (807) 767-4479,
Email: stephanie@firedogpr.com
Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Marilyn James and Taress Alexis, Is government setting Indians up for a fight?," Sinixt Radio, March 17, 2008.

Podcast Review

I found this edition of Sinixt Radio difficult to summarize. Marilyn James, the appointed spokesperson of the Sinixt people, reads several articles:



The articles are interesting in their own right, but for me the most meaningful part of the Sinixt broadcasts come when Marilyn and Taress are provoked to discuss their own views about the issues.

The idea that stuck in my mind this time came from the article about the Coast Salish gathering at the Tulalip Tribes Feb 27 - 29. Descendants of settlers have still not understood their own need to integrate into the larger history of the indigenous peoples of the Western Hemisphere. But climate change solutions may well require tribal knowledge. As North Americans come to understand their need for a history, we will likely come to show more respect for our aboriginal hosts. But that could be a long way off.

''Non-tribal environmental data only goes back to the 1930s,'' said Terry Williams of the Tulalip Tribes. ''Ours goes back thousands of years. Without our traditional knowledge, nobody truly has the ability to compare the status of fish and wildlife habitat today with its condition before the white man came.''

Williams said such traditional knowledge is just one example of the values tribes bring to natural resource management. The representatives at the gathering concurred that tribes must receive more equitable management funding to deal with climate change conditions. ''These are tribal resources being destroyed,'' Williams said. ''We have got to have the ability to build the capacity and staffing necessary to help clean up the mess, even though the tribes didn't create it.''


About the Shoshone tribal development program, Marilyn asks, What kind of weapons are they producing? and what is the environmental hazard or damage to the people in making them?

the article on Grassy Narrows documents what lobbying efforts by the people can accomplish. Boise Inc. has notified logging company AbitibiBowater that it will cease purchasing wood fiber logged from Grassy Narrows' traditional territory in the Whiskey Jack Forest without the indigenous community's consent.

Marilyn and Taress both had ideas about the Gail Toensing article on the casino in Michigan. Marilyn thinks the government is setting Indians up for a fight.

I found the one about salmon most interesting, first because of the findings. Marilyn reminds us that the salmon are having a hard time and that the oldest species of salmon spawn in the spring.

The Ford and Myers study used existing data on salmon populations to compare survival of salmon and trout that swim past salmon farms early in their life cycle with the survival of nearby populations that are not exposed to salmon farms. They found "a significant decline in survival of populations that are exposed to salmon farms."

The article was of additional interest to me because the
Public Library of Science Biology
is a peer-reviewed publication that makes high quality scientific information available on an Open Access basis.

A podcast of this broadcast is available here.
Recommend this Post


More =>

Sphere: Related Content

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

BC's first aboriginal public school planned in Prince George

I was happy to see that Prince George trustees had agreed to support plans for BC's first aboriginal school, which will emphasize aboriginal culture and customs. Better if aboriginal history, culture and customs had finally been respectfully integrated into the provincial curriculum.

That's probably too much to ask. Or not enough.

In an ideal world, representatives of post-colonial culture would be seeking to integrate their cultures and customs into the older and more diverse aboriginal vision of the region.

But BC's new school is not meant to solve all the problems--just one. Fifty p