Anti-FNGA rhetoric reaches fevered
pitch
Legislation's opponents continue to dodge accountability
issue
By Len Kruzenga
Ottawa, Ont - Approximately 1500 people massed on Parliament
Hill late last month to press their opposition to the
federal government's proposed First Nations Governance
Act.
Part of the highly touted anti-FNGA caravan that first
nations political organizations and their leaders had
organized over the previous several months to bring national
attention to first nations' opposition to INAC minister
Robert Nault and Bill C-7, the demonstrators wasted little
time in hammering home their message.
The contentious bill would require 600 Native bands to
develop codes to spell out how they choose their leaders,
run their governments and spend their money. Bands would
be allowed to develop their own laws in these three areas
so long as they met certain minimum standards set out
by the federal government. If after two years bands failed
to develop their own codes, the federal government could
impose default rules.
Union Of B.C Indian Chief's Stewart Phillip, who headed
the western contingent of the caravan, said support for
the protest was energizing.
"It's been an incredibly exciting experience and
the way we were received indicates to us the grassroots
people value what we're doing and they understand the
need for our communities to mobilize...this caravan symbolizes
the re-awakening of the spirit of our people."
And Phillip reminded the crowd that "once again we're
forced to take our message to Parliament Hill because
the government of Canada is violating our inherent aboriginal
treaty rights and attempting to 'municipalize' our communities
which we find totally unacceptable.
"We all need to understand that the future of our
children and our grandchildren is in jeopardy and we need
to give physical expression to our opposition to this
legislation that seeks to terminate and extinguish our
rights...It's time for our people to rise up and take
political action such as rallies and caravans to show
we are vehemently opposed to what the government of Canada
is attempting to do to our people."
However the protest failed to capture sustained media
attention and did little to budge the government's position
on the legislation.
Although conceding the right to protest for those opposed
to the legislation, INAC Minister Robert Nault said such
protests had become "passé."
Other members of the protest caravan, including Southern
Chief's Organization leader Grand Chief Margaret Swan
and her entourage attempted to disrupt the Commons Committee
on Aboriginal Affairs, which was conducting further review
of the bill.
And the Assembly of First Nations held a Special Confederacy
meeting at the Marriott Hotel in Ottawa to formulate more
opposition strategy.
AFN leader Matthew Coon Come as well as others prominent
chiefs, including Six Nations Chief Roberta Jamieson warned
of the potential for widespread civil disobedience and
violence if the bill was not withdrawn.
"It's not something we want or wish," said Coon
Come. "But the people's frustration with this government
is starting to boil over and I can't control what may
happen."
And the AFN published has an analysis of the presentations
made to the Standing Committee on Aboriginal Affairs,
concluding that the presentations were overwhelmingly
against the legislation.
"Our message is that there should not be federal
legislation without consent," said Russell Diabo,
of the Assembly of First Nations Implementation Committee
(AFNIC). "The government is trying to manipulate
that they did consult and that there is consent. But,
this is not the case."
Diabo said that of all the witnesses who went before the
SCAA, " 191 witnesses opposed C-7 and 10 were in
support, the Minister being one of them."
But the failure by the AFN to even admit there is any
support for the proposed legislation was best typified
by an April 30th appearance by the National Chief on CBC
Newsworld's Counter Spin program.
During the segment Coon Come was visibly angered by contentions
made by Congress of Aboriginal Peoples leader Dwight Dorey
and Drum columnist Don Sandberg that the legislation would
increase accountability from band councils.
"Our first nations are already accountable. Ninety-seven
percent of our first nations comply with the reporting
requirements that the government imposes," huffed
Coon Come.
Sandberg, when pressed to provide examples of the accountability
grassroots first nations people were hoping to realize
under the new legislation came up with several scenarios
only to have them ignored by the AFN leader or dismissed
out of hand by anti-FNGA panelist Patricia Montour.
"It was a dismal display by Coon Come and Montour,"
said April Okemah, who watched the show along with several
other urban first nations people at her home.
"Coon Come and Montour are part of the first nations
elite and can't admit to themselves or the Canadian public
that most of their people are suffering and disadvantaged
not only because of federal policies and our history but
by our own supposed leader who have a standard of living
not only beyond their own people but the majority of ordinary
Canadians as well.
"When John Corbiere was fighting for his rights was
the AFN or any of the so-called mainstream first nations
leadership or groups behind him? No, they weren't, because
there interests weren't at stake. CAP was there and so
were ordinary people who have been abused by their own
leaders.
"Listening to Coon Come and Montour speak you'd think
that this happened rarely."
"Its moral dishonesty," chided William Moose,
who says his Ontario band refuses to provide him with
even basic information he's requested over the years.
"Excuses is all we hear and blame. Blame the "colonizers
blame everything and everyone else instead of doing something.
I think most Canadians understand and believe we have
special rights and would be willing to support them but
if all our leaders can do is take a stick and poke them
in the eye and say 'you are evil, you are bad' then of
course mainstream Canada is not going to go with that.
Isn't that what they told our people in residential school
and look at where that led to.
"Our leaders are making the rest of Canada angry
with the incessant complaining and blaming and they are
making their own people angry because we know what hypocrites
most of them are. I don't trust the government but I distrust
the chiefs and the AFN and our supposed academic even
more because they've grabbed the dollars and the prestige
and the status by literally running over their own people
to get it, " said Moose
Twenty-nine-year-old Ryan Bone says the debate on the
program only served to reinforce his conviction that the
chiefs are desperate to cling to the old act which has
provided them with carte-blanche powers for decades.
"Anything that will make them accountable to the
people and impose sanctions if they aren't absolutely
terrifies them."
with files from Dan Smoke - ASAYENES (NNNC)
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