From: First Peoples Human Rights Coalition 
[mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: August-06-13 4:57 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: What¹s next? Can 13-point aboriginal declaration serve as real roadmap?

>From the article below: "But so far there has been no indication of any 
>specific actions planned by the federal government on the demands on the list."


_____________________________________
CALGARY HERALD

What's next? Can 13-point aboriginal declaration serve as real roadmap?


BY MICHAEL WOODS, POSTMEDIA NEWS AUGUST 3, 2013

HTTP://WWW.CALGARYHERALD.COM/NEWS/NATIONAL/WHAT+NEXT+POINT+ABORIGINAL+DECLARATION+SERVE+REAL+ROADMAP/8746910/STORY.HTML

[http://www.calgaryherald.com/news/national/What+next+point+aboriginal+declaration+serve+real+roadmap/8746910/cms/binary/8349962.jpg]

Clairissa Kelly of the Peguis First Nations takes part in the Idle No More 
Youth Forum in Ottawa.                                 Photograph by: The 
Canadian Press , Postmedia News

OTTAWA - It's the most concrete result of 
Attawapiskat<http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=52.9330555556,-82.4&spn=0.1,0.1&q=52.9330555556,-82.4%20(Attawapiskat%20First%20Nation)&t=h>
 Chief Theresa Spence<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theresa_Spence>'s 44-day 
diet of fish broth and tea: a 13-point declaration of commitment, supported by 
aboriginal leaders and opposition parties, listing priorities in dealing with 
the issues facing indigenous 
Canadians<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aboriginal_peoples_in_Canada>.
But so far there has been no indication of any specific actions planned by the 
federal government on the demands on the list.
A set of summary notes - apparently written by someone at the Jan. 11 meeting 
between Prime Minister Stephen Harper<http://pm.gc.ca/eng/default.asp> and 
First Nations<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Nations> leaders - indicates 
the prime minister was unyielding on most points the chiefs raised. The 
Aboriginal People's Television Network<http://www.ptv.ph/> posted the 
"confidential draft" on its website Friday, declining to reveal the document's 
source other than to say it was based on notes taken by Assembly of First 
Nations staff inside the meeting. The prime minister's office declined to 
comment on the notes.
The eight discussion points at that Jan. 11 meeting, which some chiefs 
boycotted, are also part of the 13-pointdeclaration Spence spearheaded.
They include demands such as a public commission of inquiry on violence against 
indigenous women and the establishment of a dedicated secretariat within the 
Privy Council office devoted to First Nations issues.
Some demands focus on long-term issues such as a revised fiscal relationship 
between First Nations and the government, and frameworks and mandates for 
treaty implementation.
On Thursday, interim Liberal leader Bob Rae<http://www.bobrae.ca/> bristled at 
a suggestion that the declaration he and others had signed along with Spence 
featured unattainable goals. He also rejected the notion that it was a 
face-saving measure to get Spence to end her protest fast, calling the document 
"an absolutely realistic assessment of the steps that need to be taken in our 
lifetime" if Canada is to achieve reconciliation with its aboriginal population.
Joyce Green, a University of Regina political science professor, said she 
thinks much of the 13-point declaration is reasonable and practical, but it 
requires sufficient public support.
"It places the government in the position of having to make a choice, and they 
will do that based on a political calculus," Green said. "If this government 
doesn't see some kind of political benefit greater than the political liability 
of ignoring it, then they will not move."
The indigenous grassroots Idle No More<http://idlenomore.ca/> movement, she 
said, is helping build non-native Canadians' awareness of the issues and will 
give them some political muscle, she said.
Idle No More is planning a day of action for Monday when the House of Commons 
resumes business. A recent Ipsos Reid poll for Postmedia News suggested the 
movement has 38 per cent supportamong Canadians, compared to Harper's 46 per 
cent approval rating on aboriginal issues.
Queen's University Prof. Kathy Brock<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kathy_Brock>, 
who studies aboriginal self-governance, said the declaration's importance lies 
in its overall message: that tangible action is needed from the federal 
government.
"A document like this sets a base. It signals a need for action. And if the 
government is going to negotiate withchiefs more broadly, then these types of 
items are going to change, they're going to evolve and they're going to become 
more workable."
Specific points are less cut-and-dry. Dealing with the housing problems in 
First Nations communities, for example, involves a host of other complex issues 
including financial accountability and community engagement. And the advantages 
of having an oversight body for aboriginal issues in the Privy Council office 
aren't necessarily clear.
"Do you want micromanagement of these issues by central officials, or do you 
want people within Indian Affairs who work with the communities and can get the 
First Nations feedback on a direct level about issues likebulimia 
nervosa<http://www.bulimianervosahelp.com/>? That's a really tough question," 
Brock said.
Opposition parties certainly have a political interest in the declaration, 
Brock said. It puts them at the front of a key issue and gives them something 
to hammer the Conservatives with in the House when it resumes Monday.
The last point in the declaration asks for full implementation of the United 
Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous People. NDP aboriginal affairs 
critic Romeo Saganash<http://www.saganash.ca/> plans to introduce a private 
member's bill on that subject Monday.
© Copyright (c) Postmedia News<http://www.canada.com/>





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