Showing posts with label Barriere Lake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barriere Lake. Show all posts

Friday, November 26, 2010


ABORIGINAL AFFAIRS:
OTTAWA DEMONSTRATION FOR BARRIERE LAKE SOLIDARITY:
The following notice of a demonstration set for December 13 on Parliament Hill comes from the Barriere Lake Solidarity group.
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DAY OF ACTION TO SUPPORT THE ALGONQUINS OF BARRIERE LAKE



DEMAND THAT CANADA RESPECT BARRIERE LAKE'S TRADITIONAL GOVERNMENT AND TRAILBLAZING ENVIRONMENTAL AGREEMENTS


MONDAY DECEMBER 13, NOON, PARLIAMENT HILL



DOWNLOAD FLYERS: Front and Back
DOWNLOAD EDUCATIONAL PAMPHLET: HERE

::TRANSPORT FROM MONTREAL::
For those in Montreal, hop on a free bus to the Ottawa rally!
Leaving 9am from the corner of Mackay and Maisonneuve (Metro Guy-Concordia)
Returning to Montreal in the late afternoon or early evening.
TO BOOK A SPOT, email barrierelakesolidarity@gmail.com with your name and phone number.



What if a foreign regime was destroying your system of government, so it could then steal your resources and prevent you from environmentally protecting your homeland? This is what the Harper Government and federal bureaucrats are doing to the First Nation of Barriere Lake.

For more than two decades, the Algonquins of Barriere Lake have been demonstrating environmental leadership to the rest of Canada, campaigning to stop destructive clear-cut logging and to implement a sustainable development plan in their homeland in north-western Quebec.

But multi-national forestry corporations and government bureaucrats have refused to honour any of the agreements signed with Barriere Lake. They have tried at every turn to undermine the small community, one of the poorest in the country, and prevent them from implementing and realizing their vision for the protection and stewardship of the forests.


The David-vs-Goliath story now has a dark new twist: the Conservative government and bureaucrats in Indian and Northern Affairs Canada are interfering in Barriere Lake’s internal affairs, using section 74 of the Indian Act to forcibly assimilate and destroy the community's traditional government -- a traditional government the community has used for countless generations and which maintains their hunting way of life and respect for the environment.


Led by Barriere Lake youth, the overwhelming majority of the community are struggling to preserve their traditional government, so they can continue protecting the watersheds, forests, wildlife and lands for all future generations, Native and non-Native.

The Harper government is violating the Canadian Constitution, which protects the Aboriginal right to self-government. They are violating the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous peoples, even though they have now endorsed it.


Join the Algonquins of Barriere Lake on Parliament Hill as they demand the Harper government and federal bureaucrats reject the use of section 74 and respect the community's traditional government and vision for environmental protection!

For more info: www.barrierelakesolidarity.org



:: BACKGROUND: HOW IS THE GOVERNMENT DESTROYING BARRIERE LAKE'S TRADITIONAL GOVERNMENT? AND WHY? ::

The government has used an archaic section of the Indian Act – section 74 – to unilaterally impose a different system of government on Barriere Lake.

Barriere Lake’s traditional government – open to community members who have connection to the land, and in which Elders guide potential leaders and safeguard their customs – ensures that community members maintain their sacred bond to the land and their hunting way of life. The band council electoral system the Harper government has imposed destroys the sacred governance bond the community has with the land. By breaking Barriere Lake's connection to the land, the Canadian and Quebec governments hope to get away with violating trailblazing environmental agreements and with illegally clear-cutting in Barriere Lake's traditional territory.

The overwhelming majority of community members want to protect their traditional governance system, but the bureaucrats in Indian and Northern Affairs Canada are spreading the misinformation that they are only a small group.

Through the summer, the Indian and Northern Affairs Canada bureaucracy ran an illegal process, imposed by the Quebec police, to bring the new system into the community. Fewer than a dozen ballots were sent in to nominate candidates for an Indian Act Chief and Council, who where then seated by acclamation. Meanwhile, almost 200 community members had signed a resolution rejecting this process! That represents a majority of community members who are eligible to participate in their political process.

Even the acclaimed Chief resigned in protest, refusing to break ranks with the community's majority. But four rogue band councillors with no community support have been illegally making decisions on behalf of Barriere Lake ever since. Shuttled to secret meetings with forestry companies and government officials, these councilors are being used by the government to derail Barriere Lake's precedent-setting environmental agreements and to facilitate illegal clear-cut logging.

Youth in the community are leading the movement to protect their traditional government and to heal and overcome the community divisions created by the internal meddling of government bureaucrats.

They are demanding the Harper Government cancel the imposition on Barriere Lake of the section 74 Indian Act band council system and respect their right to select leaders according to their traditional system of government.

Friday, January 02, 2009



ABORIGINAL AFFAIRS:

SOLIDARITY WITH BENJAMIN NOTTAWAY-A CANADIAN POLITICAL PRISONER:
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Does Canada have political prisoners ? From one point of view- no; not since the October crisis of 1970 have people been jailed in Canada solely for holding certain political opinions. In another sense- very much yes; many people have been jailed in this country for peaceful civil disobedience, and it's likely that this will continue. The following is the story of one such person, Chief Benjamin Nottaway of the Barriere Lake Algonquin nation. He has been put in prison for 45 days for a highway protest, and the following announces not just solidarity rallies in support of him and his cause but also asks you to drop him a note of support.
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Action Alert
NATIVE RIGHTS UNDER LOCK & KEY:
Rallies to support the Algonquins of Barriere Lake and jailed Customary Chief Benjamin Nottaway
OTTAWA
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
WEDNESDAY,
January 7th, 2009, NOON
WHERE: Indian and Northern Affairs Canada
Corner of Wellington and Montcalm in GATINEAU
MARCH to the Gatineau Detention Centre, 75 Rue St. Francois
Click HERE FOR A MAP
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
MONTREAL
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
THURSDAY,
January 8, 2009, NOON
In front of Jean Charest's office
corner of McGill College & Sherbrooke
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
* Bring banners, signs, placards, noise-makers...
**Hot chocolate and snacks will be served at both rallies.
For more information, click here
Posted by Barriere Lake Solidarity at 1:06 AM
Sunday, December 21, 2008
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And don't forget the man himself. Here's the instructions for sending him a letter.
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Send a letter to Acting Chief Benjamin Nottaway :
Acting Chief Benjamin Nottaway is being held in jail for 45 days, not counting 2 weeks in pre-trial detention, for peacefully protesting on highway 117 in attempts to have Barriere Lake's signed agreements honoured and for the Canadian government to respect Barriere Lake's Customary Governance.




This is part of a larger and disturbing trend in Canada, where indigenous leadership are being jailed for standing up for their constitutionally-recognized Aboriginal rights. In Ontario, both KI6 and Bob Lovelace were jailed for peaceful protest for several months. A decision that was overturned in the court of appeal.
To send Benjamin a letter of support:
Benjamin Nottaway
Hull Detention Centre
P-6, D-3
75 Rue St. Francois
Hull, Quebec J9A 1B4
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THE BACKGROUND:
Wonder what this all about ? Here's a little background from the Globe and mail via the Barriere Lake Solidarity site.
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Blockade leader says he's a 'political prisoner' :
JOE FRIESEN
GLOBE AND MAIL
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20081215.NATIVES15/TPStory/National
Speaking from a jail cell, deposed native leader Benjamin Nottaway says he is a political prisoner, targeted for his outspoken opposition to the governments of Canada and Quebec.




He is the latest casualty of a power struggle that has included allegations of a political coup, fire bombings and several interventions by riot police.




It reads like a tale ripped from the headlines of a war-torn dictatorship. Instead, it's the story of the Algonquins of Barriere Lake, a Quebec community of 450 people three hours north of Ottawa.




Mr. Nottaway, imprisoned for 45 days for leading a highway blockade, says that although he misses his children, he is being treated with respect in jail, where fellow inmates refer to him deferentially as the "chief." But the question of who actually is the chief of Barriere Lake is far from clear.




Mr. Nottaway alleges that he was deposed by an ambitious group of plotters led by Casey Ratt, who launched what Nottaway supporters call an "administrative coup d'état" this year and installed themselves as the band government.




He calls Mr. Ratt a "puppet" and a "government agent," propped up by officials in Ottawa and Quebec City who see him as a soft touch when it comes to defending aboriginal land title and resource rights.




Mr. Ratt laughs at these suggestions, and says there is no leadership crisis in Barriere Lake, save for the grumblings of those who have lost their grip on power and have enlisted non-native activists to push their case in the news media.




He says he came to power in January after a three-month leadership review, which he launched because he was upset that Mr. Nottaway's group had closed the band school, a move he perceived as motivated by their own political aims.




"It's no good for our kids to use them as political pawns," Mr. Ratt says."A lot of people didn't agree with those tactics."




After Mr. Ratt was declared chief, his opponents said he had hijacked the traditional selection process and tried to push him off the reserve. His house burned down in suspicious circumstances, he says, as did the band office.




"But I'm still in the community," he says. "It's a steady struggle.




"Barriere Lake does not elect leaders according to the one-member, one-vote system set out in the Indian Act, but instead uses a selection system led by a council of elders. The federal government says it has no role in adjudicating that system, but has acknowledged the election of Mr. Ratt's group and says it will conduct business with his council.




After several escalating protests against Mr. Ratt's government, the Nottaway group blockaded Highway 117 twice in recent months. In October,riot police were sent in by the provincial police force and were accused of using violent tactics to disperse the protesters. In November, Mr.Nottaway and four other prominent political opponents of Mr. Ratt were arrested by riot police for staging another highway blockade, which they called a tactic of last resort. They were asking the federal government to appoint an independent observer to oversee a new leadership selection.




"When I was in court my lawyer told me, 'The Crown wants you to suffer, they want you to feel the pain.' They asked for 12 months, but I got 45 days," Mr. Nottaway says. "I'm a political prisoner, and they know that. It's all politically motivated.




"The people of Barriere Lake have never signed a treaty with Canada, and they say they have never received a fair share, or had a say, in the resource revenue extracted from their traditional territory, which they estimate at $100-million a year. For its part, the community suffers crippling unemployment and is not connected to the power grid, so it runs on diesel generators.




Mr. Ratt says he wants to put the power struggle behind him and work toward finding both short- and long-term solutions for his community. Mr. Nottaway says he can't allow the band to be led by a chief he considers illegitimate. His goal is to see a 1991 trilateral agreement on resource management honoured by the province and the federal government.




"The government imposed a minority faction on our community," he says."That's not what we want and we're never going to accept it. Even though I'm in here, we're not going to stop fighting."

Thursday, November 20, 2008


ABORIGINAL AFFAIRS:
SOLIDARITY WITH THE ALGONQUINS OF BARRIERE LAKE:

The following, courtesy of the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty (OCAP), is a notice of a solidarity demonstration to be held tomorrow in Toronto. The subject is the arrests made against the Algonquins of Barriere lake in Québec during recent road blockades.
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Toronto rally in support of Algonquins of Barriere Lake:‏
please circulate
________________
TORONTO RALLY IN SUPPORT OF ALGONQUINS OF BARRIERE LAKE
FRIDAY 21 November 2008
12 NOON
20 QUEEN STREET WEST (QUEEN AND YONGE)
QUEBEC OFFICE IN TORONTO
On Wednesday, 17 November, the Algonquins of Barriere Lake setup four blockades on Highway 117. The governments of Quebec and Canada refused to negotiate sending in Riot Police to attack the peaceful protesters. This time, they targeted the organizers. The community spokesperson and the Acting Chief were arrested along with three others.
The Algonquins of Barriere Lake have been fighting for the control of their land and resources for centuries. In 1991, the community signed co-management agreements with Quebec and Canada. Both governments have reneged on their promises refusing to honor the agreements.
Tired of having their agreements ignored, 100 children, women and men, community members and supporters peacefully blockaded Highway 117 on October 6. They were attacked by the Quebec Riot Police, tear gassed, pepper sprayed, beaten and pushed around. 9 people were arrested.
THIS CANNOT BE TOLERATED.
On Friday at 12 noon, protesters will gather outside the HQ of the Quebec government in Ontario demanding the immediate release of the political prisoners and that all charges are dropped. We also demand that Quebec and Canada honor the signed agreements and negotiate with the community. Supporters who took part in the 17 November action will be present. Bring banners, placards and noisemakers. For more information: http://barrierelakesolidarity.blogspot.com/
For details on what you can do further:
Barriere Lake's Specific Demands:
1. That the Government of Canada agree to respect the outcome of a new leadership re-selection process, with outside observers, recognize the resulting Customary Chief and Council, and cease all interference in the internal governance of Barriere Lake.
2. That the Government of Canada agree to the immediate incorporation of an Algonquin language and culture program into the primary school curriculum.
3. That the Government of Canada honour signed agreements with Barriere Lake, including the Trilateral, the Memorandum of Mutual Intent, and the Special Provisions, all of which it has illegally terminated.
4. That the Government of Canada revoke Third Party Management, which was imposed unjustly on Barriere Lake.
5. That the Province of Quebec honour signed agreements with Barriere Lake, including the 1991 Trilateral and 1998 Bilateral agreements, and adopt for implementation the Lincoln-Ciaccia joint recommendations, including $1.5 million in resource-revenue sharing.
6. That the Government of Canada and the Province of Quebec initiate a judicial inquiry into the Quebec Regional Office of the Department of Indian Affairs' treatment of Barriere Lake and other First Nations who may request to be included.
7. The Government of Quebec, in consultation with First Nations, conduct a review of the recommendations of the Ontario Ipperwash Commission for guidance towards improving Quebec-First Nation relations and improving the policing procedures of the SQ when policing First Nation communities.
Send Letters to these Political Representatives:
*Stephen Harper, Prime Minister
Telephone: (613) 992-4211
Fax: (613) 941-6900
E-Mail: pm@pm.gc.ca
*Chuck Strahl, Minister of Indian Affairs & Northern Development
Canada Indian Affairs and Northern Development
Terrasses de la Chaudiere,
North Tower,
Suite 2100
10 Wellington Street
Gatineau, Quebec
K1A 0H4
Phone: (819) 997-0002/
Fax: (819) 953-4941
*Lawrence Cannon,
Local Member of Parliament,
Minister of Foreign Affairs
House of Commons
Ottawa, ON
K1A 0A6
Telephone: (613) 992-5516/
Fax: (613) 992-6802
*Jean Charest, Premier minister,
Quebec
phone: 418 643-5321/
Fax: 418 643-3924
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Also, from the Barriere Lake Solidarity site here's the story of what happened yesterday (November 19).
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Wednesday, November 19, 2008
SQ riot squad arrest 5 Algonquins, including Acting Chief Benjamin Nottaway:
Kitiganik/Rapid Lake, Algonquin Territory /
- SQ officers and a Riot Squad arrested five Barriere Lake Algonquins, including a targeted arrest of Acting Chief Benjamin Nottaway, after forcing community members off highway 117, during their fourth in a series of blockades over a period of seven hours.


"Chief Nottaway sent a letter to Premier Charest on Monday requesting that the government resolve political issues through negotiations rather than police violence," said community spokesperson Norman Matchewan."Blockades are a tactic of last resort. For two decades now all we've asked is that Quebec and Canada honour signed agreements but they prefer to play with our lives."




As the community was pushed off the highway for the last time at 2:30 pm, riot police broke out of formation to chase and arrest Acting Chief Nottaway. His was the second targeted arrest of the day. Community youth spokesperson Marylynn Poucachiche, mother of five and organizer of the community school, was arrested at one of the morning blockades after being reassured by police that no arrests would be made since protesters had agreed to leave peacefully.




One community member was pushed to the ground and kicked by several SQ officers before being arrested.




"The police dragged him with his head on the ground all the way to the police car," said one community member.




Another woman from the community fell while being pushed back onto the access road leading to the Barriere Lake reserve, and hit her head. She was subsequently arrested.
-30-
Media Contacts:
Norman Matchewan, Barriere Lake spokesperson: 819 – 435 – 2171, 514 - 831 - 6902
Marylynn Poucachiche, Barriere Lake spokesperson: 514 - 893 - 8283, 819 - 860 - 3860
Norman Young, Grand Chief of the Algonquin Nation Secretariat: 819 - 627 - 6869

Tuesday, October 28, 2008


CANADIAN ANARCHIST MOVEMENT:
TWO MORE EVENTS IN TORONTO:
Here from the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty (OCAP) are two more events coming up shortly down Toronto way.
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Two Important Upcoming Events‏:
!!** please forward widely **!!
TWO IMPORTANT UPCOMING EVENTS:
1. TOMORROW- Picket at CKLN -- Illegal AGM: Demand Re-Instatement of Dismissed Programmers
2. NEXT WEDNESDAY- Algonquins of Barriere Lake: Toronto Public Event
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Freedom of the media violated at CKLN! No to Right Wing Censorship! - Take Back Our Radio Association
COME OUT AND SUPPORT COMMUNITY RADIO:
Wednesday, October 29th7 pm
Oakham House, Room G
Gould and Church Streets, Ryerson Campus
The crisis of governance at CKLN Campus/Community Radio continues to escalate. The illegal of Board of Directors has called an Annual General meeting:
Agenda:
Financial Report
Union negotiations
Election of Community Reps to the Board of Directors
Wednesday, October 29th
7 pm
Oakham House, Room G
Gould and Church Streets, Ryerson Campus
Station Manager Mike Phillips has called this meeting. As “dismissed”volunteers and community supporters, we strongly object to this Meeting for these reasons:
*Mike Phillips, Interim Station Manager, has no legal authority to call a CKLN Annual General Meeting, because he was democratically voted out of office by an overwhelming 90% majority in a non-confidence motion on January 23, 2008 at a Special General Meeting called by the membership in accordance with CKLN by-laws.
Nevertheless Phillips and a right wing clique have occupied the radio station from January until now and are violating the mandate of the station to be an inclusive and progressive station and a voice for marginalized communities in Toronto.
*Programming has deteriorated as indicated by the failure of this illegal board to raise adequate money at the recent Fund fest and the withholding of the student levy to the station by Ryerson Students Union.
*At previous meetings Metro Police have been employed to bar the new board and its supporters from participating. We intend to challenge this exclusion on October 29th.
*We therefore ask all “dismissed” CKLN volunteer programmers, hosts and staff (35 so far) and concerned community supporters of CKLN and Ryerson students to attend the Annual General Meeting Wednesday October 29th at 7pm. Our purpose is to publicize and protest against this meeting as illegitimate and biased, a mockery of the democratic process, a complete sham! Signed
Catherine Holliday 416 533 6630 catherine.holliday@utoronto.ca
Owen Leach
(Dismissed volunteers and community supporters)
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OPIRG – Toronto presents...
*Blockade: Algonquins Defend the Forest, 1989-2008*:
*Panel discussion and film screening*
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WEDNESDAY, November 5, 7:00pm, 2008
OISE (Ontario Institute for Studies in Education), Room # 2-211
University of Toronto
252 Bloor Street W (@ St. George Subway Station)
Donations encouraged
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Hear from Barriere Lake Algonquin community representatives, following an intense summer of marches on Ottawa, sustained calls for public support,protests in front of Premier Charest's office, an occupation of local MP Lawrence Cannon's office, and culminating in a one-day blockade of Highway 117 that resulted in 9 arrests and the deployment of riot police and tear gas. A short film of the recent blockades will be screened.
Since the Department of Indian Affairs ousted their Customary Chief and Council in March 2008 and used the Surete du Quebec to forcibly impose the authority of a minority community faction, the Algonquins have been organizing to roll-back the quiet coup d'etat. They are campaigning to make the government honour a number of agreements, including the Trilateral, a internationally praised land co-management and resource-revenue sharing deal the Algonquins signed with Canada and Quebec in 1991. It remains unimplemented.
Community spokespeople from Barriere Lake: Norman Matchewan and Marylynn Poucachiche are teachers in Barriere Lake's Algonquin elementary school and Barriere Lake's youth spokespeople.
***Donations of money are encouraged to support the community's campaign –they need money for gas to travel. Click here for a full list of community needs and to make an online donation:
For more information Contact :
Ontario Public Interest Research Group (OPIRG)
Research – Education – Action on Social and Environmental Issues
(416)-978-7770
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Dear Friends and Allies,
On November 5th, OPIRG and the Barriere Lake Solidarity will be hosting an event Norman Matchewan and Marylynn Poucachiche who are community members and elementary school teachers from the Algonquin Barriere Lake community. Norman and Marylynn will be here to show video footage of past and recent actions by the community in defense of the land, and to discuss with people in Toronto the ongoing struggles in Barriere Lake.
We are asking all organizations, friends and allies to please:
- Endorse and Support this event on November 5th
- Help publicize this Event by sending this announcement over your lists,and distributing posters or leaflets at any upcoming events
- Support the List of Demands from the community: http://barrierelakesolidarity.blogspot.com/2008/03/mission.html
-DONATE: the community of Barriere Lake is in great need of financial support: RAISE FUNDS within your organization and bring donations to the November 5th event, or make donations On-line:
Thank you for your support, if you have any questions please do not hesitate to contact us. Sincerely,
Ontario Public Interest Research Group (OPIRG) - Toronto
Contact:
416-978-7770
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**
Ontario Coalition Against Poverty
10 Britain St.
Toronto, ON M5A 1R6
416-925-6939
**