From: Russ Diabo [mailto:russdi...@rogers.com]
Sent: July-23-12 6:52 AM
To: Russ Diabo
Subject: RABBLE: Red squares for Indigenous solidarity: Montreal protests 
logging of Algonquin land

Published on rabble.ca (http://rabble.ca)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Red squares for Indigenous solidarity: Montreal protests logging of Algonquin 
land

July 23, 2012

[1]

Last week in Montreal, clanging cookware and red squares became symbols of 
solidarity with an Indigenous community defending its land rights. On 
Wednesday, July 18, about 200 people demonstrated at the Montreal headquarters 
of Resolute Forest Products, the logging company currently locked in a 
stand-off with Algonquin protestors near Poigan Bay, Quebec.

Banging pots and pans, the crowd denounced Resolute for continuing to log in 
the territory of the Algonquins of Barriere Lake despite staunch opposition 
from the people living there.

Members of this Indigenous community, located a four-hour drive north of 
Montreal, have maintained a protest camp near the logging site for more than 
two weeks. Gabriel Wawatie, an elder whose family harvesting grounds fall 
within the area being cut, wrote in a letter to Quebec Premier Jean Charest on 
July 4: "As one of the main harvesters, I was not properly consulted nor 
provided a written consent to this logging."

Other Algonquins at the protest camp have decried a lack of community 
consultation and warned that the area being logged includes moose habitat and 
sacred grounds.

"They're not only destroying the forest," said community member Severe Ratt in 
a July 13 interview with CUTV [2]. "They're also destroying our way of life."

Wednesday's protest in Montreal included speeches from members of Indigenous 
solidarity groups, the Algonquins of Barriere Lake (via cellphone from the 
logging site), and Quebec's leading student coalition (Coalition large de 
l'Association pour une solidarité syndicale étudiante, or CLASSE [3]).

Protesters tried to enter the building of Resolute Forest Products to deliver a 
letter from the Barriere Lake community, but were blocked by security guards.

Following the action, the Indigenous Peoples Solidarity Movement Ottawa 
observed in a Facebook post: "The often invisible but essential organizing by 
native solidarity activists over years in Montreal has laid groundwork to bring 
Indigenous rights into Quebec's mass movement, drawing new connections between 
the struggle for decolonization and broader social justice."

The influence is flowing the other way, too, as some of the Algonquin community 
have taken up the red square symbol and are wearing it at the logging protest 
camp.

For Resolute Forest Products (formerly known as Abitibi Bowater), the timing of 
the protest campaign is not good. Just last month, in a joint press release 
with the World Wildlife Fund, it proclaimed its distinction as the company 
logging the largest acreage of forest certified by the Forest Stewardship 
Council (FSC). FSC certification is meant to denote sustainable forest 
management, including respect for Aboriginal rights.

On Wednesday, Resolute responded to the controversy with a press release 
stating that its "right to harvest in the area has been approved by the QMNRW 
[Quebec Ministry of Natural Resources and Wildlife], following appropriate 
consultation with the Barriere Lake Band Council."

I was unable to reach anyone at the company or the band council office to 
clarify the nature of this consultation.

What the release failed to mention is that the band council in question 
consists of four people declared to be councillors by the federal government in 
a highly contentious, undemocratic process that was denounced by the majority 
of community members and by the Assembly of First Nations.

In 2010, the federal Department of Indian and Northern Affairs announced it 
would no longer recognize the First Nation's traditional governance and 
leadership selection system. It would instead impose the election-based band 
council system.

The move was so reviled by the community that nearly every member boycotted the 
process. Only 10 people submitted nominations. Two hundred members -- a 
majority of eligible voters -- signed a petition stating their opposition to 
the election and their desire to maintain the traditional system.

Undeterred, the federal government simply declared the five people who had been 
nominated to be the new band council. The man named as chief resigned in 
protest.

The four band councillors remain, to this day, the official leadership of the 
community in the eyes of the federal government. Three of them do not live on 
the reserve that's home to the majority of the people they are supposed to 
represent. It seems that consultation over resource extraction is happening 
only with them, with most of the community left in the dark.

"It was very hard to find out what's happening because we have no 
communication, especially with the council that is there right now," said 
Severe Ratt.

As a signatory to the Canadian Boreal Forest Agreement, Resolute has committed 
to "proactively addressing the interests of forest dependent communities in a 
respectful manner" and endorses the idea that "successful forest 
conservation... require[s] effective involvement of Aboriginal peoples and 
their governments."

The logging operation also falls within a zone certified by the Canadian 
Standards Association, under a standard that states: "Aboriginal forest users 
and communities... require unique consideration in the public participation 
process."

Can Resolute believe these standards have been upheld in any meaningful sense 
in the case of Barriere Lake? When the family that harvests from the forest say 
they were never consulted, and along with sixty other community members are so 
upset by the logging they drop their regular activities to maintain a two-week 
protest camp, claims of "appropriate consultation," "effective involvement" and 
"unique consideration" of forest users ring hollow.

Today, in the woods near Poigan Bay, dozens of Algonquins remain encamped by 
the logging machinery sent to level the forest that provides them with food, 
medicine, spiritual sustenance and cultural memory.

The government and the logging company cannot sweep these people under the rug 
by simply repeating the party line that the band council speaks for the 
community, the band council has been consulted and that is that.

They are determined to stay and be heard, and their links with broader 
movements for social justice across the province are growing. They will not go 
quietly.


For more information and up-to-date media coverage, see the websites of 
Indigenous Peoples Solidarity Movement Ottawa [4] and Barriere Lake Solidarity 
[5].

Lori Theresa Waller is a freelance writer and editor based in Ottawa. She has 
written for Briarpatch Magazine, The Dominion and The Ottawa Citizen.

Source URL (retrieved on Jul 23 2012 - 9:48am): 
http://rabble.ca/news/2012/07/red-squares-indigenous-solidarity-montreal-protests-logging-algonquin-land


Links:
[1] http://rabble.ca/sites/rabble/files/node-images/BL solidarity casserole - 
photo by david champagne_013.jpg
[2] http://cutvmontreal.ca/
[3] http://www.bloquonslahausse.com/
[4] http://ipsmo.wordpress.com/2012/07/11/coverage-abl-logging-protest/
[5] http://www.barrierelakesolidarity.org/
[6] 
http://rabble.ca/rabbletv/program-guide/2012/07/best-net/urgent-call-solidarity-algonquins-barriere-lake
[7] 
http://rabble.ca/multimedia/2012/07/algonquins-barriere-lake-stand-against-logging
[8] http://rabble.ca/user
[9] http://rabble.ca/user/register



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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