With natives feeling ignored on key treaty rights, Shawn Atleo, the newly 
re-elected Chief of the Assembly of First Nations, says the advocacy 
organization will take the conversation directly to businesses on resource 
development.
(Michelle Siu/The Canadian Press) + 
AFN chief Atleo to push for partnerships at premiers' meeting
Heather Scoffield 

Ottawa - The Canadian Press

Published Wednesday, Jul. 25 2012, 10:32 AM EDT

Last updated Wednesday, Jul. 25 2012, 11:17 AM EDT

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/afn-chief-atleo-to-push-for-partnerships-at-premiers-meeting/article4440137/

National chief Shawn Atleo wants the premiers to recognize first nations as 
full and equal partners in developing natural resources, but he says such 
recognition should not have to wait for politicians to agree on a national 
energy plan.

The head of the Assembly of First Nations and other aboriginal leaders are 
meeting today with premiers in Lunenburg, N.S., in advance of the annual 
Council of the Federation summit on inter-provincial relations.

The premiers, like Mr. Atleo, are consumed with devising better ways to develop 
natural resources so that more people can benefit, and so that the environment 
does not pay too steep a price.

But details of what a national energy strategy would look like are vague, and 
buy-in from all the provinces is uncertain - especially now that Alberta and 
British Columbia are sparring openly over the Northern Gateway pipeline.

Mr. Atleo says the premiers don't need to reach agreement on a strategy to 
recognize and support the fundamental concept of first nations having the right 
to have a say and share in the wealth that comes from exploiting natural 
resources.

"We have to be full partners," he said in an interview from Halifax on Tuesday 
night.

That means engaging with first nations early and often, obtaining their consent 
in the plans for development, and devising ways to share the spoils, such as 
through equity stakes or investment in communities, he said.

At their annual general meeting last week, first nations chiefs made it clear 
they will insist on playing a larger role, either through negotiation with the 
provincial and federal governments, through the courts or through protests and 
blockades, Mr. Atleo said.

Indeed, many individual first nations are in the midst of opposing some of 
Canada's largest resource developments: the Northern Gateway pipeline to take 
Alberta bitumen to the West Coast; the Plan Nord for Quebec and the Ring of 
Fire mineral deposit in northern Ontario.

The conflict "becomes a familiar pattern that we're trying to break out of," 
Mr. Atleo said.

With the Canadian Council for Chief Executives indicating earlier this month 
that aboriginal communities should be fully included in energy and mining 
developments, and with the premiers agonizing over similar issues, Mr. Atleo 
says the time is ripe for crafting a broad framework that takes into account 
all interests.

"I hope we're at a turning point," he said.

For the national chief, a successful meeting with the premiers today would be 
one in which the premiers recognize first nations as full partners, with 
still-valid historical rights to health care, education and the land.

On education, he wants premiers to agree to work with first nations educators 
so that native children can have their schooling recognized in provincial 
systems.

And on violence against women, he hopes to see premiers back the call from 
aboriginal groups for a national inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal 
women.

Mr. Atleo is meeting the leaders of the other aboriginal groups this morning so 
they can form a common front on how best persuade premiers to join them in 
mitigating violence against women.

"There isn't any one us in any one community who has not been touched by this 
issue," he said. "I know what it's like to feel unsafe in a community as a 
child."



More Related to this Story
  a.. B.C. vows to block pipeline unless Alberta ponies up 

  b.. Also Energy, health care dominate agenda of premiers summit 

  c.. B.C.'s Northern Gateway demands trigger showdown with Alberta 

 The Globe and Mail's Ottawa Bureau Chief, John Ibbitson. Brigitte Bouvier/For 
The Globe and Mail. 
video
Video: John Ibbitson: Don't discount impact of premiers' meeting on Canada

 


video
Video: Redford fires back over B.C.'s pipeline demands


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