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	<title> &#187; Masks of Genocide</title>
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		<title>Native groups use Macdonald&#8217;s birthday to raise issue of his legacy of residential schools</title>
		<link>https://sttpml.org/canada/native-groups-use-macdonalds-birthday-to-raise-issue-of-his-legacy-of-residential-schools/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Jan 2015 16:52:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[jimcraven]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CANADIAN GOVERNMENT POLICY]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[COLONIALISM]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Corrupt Tribal Councils and Genocide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CORRUPTION]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[FALSE FLAG OPS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GENOCIDE]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Indigenous Activists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MAINSTREAM MEDIA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Masks of Genocide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NAZI EUGENICS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PSYCHOPATHY AND SOCIOPATHY]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[REAL HISTORY EXPOSED]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[STATE SPONSORED TERRORISM]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Venerated Elders Blackfoot]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WHISTLE-BLOWERS]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Native groups use Macdonald&#8217;s birthday to raise issue of his legacy of residential schools &#8220;If people really knew the history of Sir John A. Macdonald, I&#8217;m not sure if they would celebrate his legacy,&#8221; Deputy Grand Chief Alvin Fiddler from &#8230; <a href="https://sttpml.org/canada/native-groups-use-macdonalds-birthday-to-raise-issue-of-his-legacy-of-residential-schools/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Native groups use Macdonald&#8217;s birthday to raise issue of his legacy of residential schools</h2>
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<p>&#8220;If people really knew the history of Sir John A. Macdonald, I&#8217;m not sure if they would celebrate his legacy,&#8221; Deputy Grand Chief Alvin Fiddler from the Nishnawbe Aski Nation said. (ANDRE FORGET/QMI AGENCY)</p>
<div><!-- @name: articleAside - Aside for Article and Contest --><a tabindex="-1" href="http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/stephen-harper-helps-celebrate-200th-anniversary-of-sir-john-a-macdonald-s-birth-1.2183044#.VLM3F3Q82VE.gmail" target="_parent">http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/stephen-harper-helps-celebrate-200th-anniversary-of-sir-john-a-macdonald-s-birth-1.2183044#.VLM3F3Q82VE.gmail</a></div>
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<div>http://news.nationalpost.com/2015/01/10/sure-john-a-macdonald-was-was-a-racist-colonizer-and-misogynist-but-so-were-most-canadians-back-then/</p>
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<p>10 things about John A Macdonald</p>
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<li><a href="http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Canada/2015/01/09/22172601.html"><img alt="article" src="http://cnews.canoe.ca/commons/assets/img/icon-texte-small.png" width="8" height="9" /> John A. Macdonald&#8217;s 200th birthday: The humble roots of our first prime minister </a></li>
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<h3><a href="mailto:nicole.ireland@sunmedia.ca">Nicole Ireland</a>, QMI Agency</h3>
<p><time datetime="2015-01-09">Jan 9, 2015</time>, Last Updated: 5:57 PM ET</p>
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<p>Aboriginal people in Canada say the 200th anniversary of Sir John A. Macdonald&#8217;s birth is anything but a cause for celebration.</p>
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<p>&#8220;If people really knew the history of Sir John A. Macdonald, I&#8217;m not sure if they would celebrate his legacy,&#8221; Alvin Fiddler, Deputy Grand Chief of Nishnawbe Aski Nation, told QMI Agency. Nishnawbe Aski Nation represents 49 First Nation communities in Ontario.</p>
<p>First Nations and Metis people continue to live with the consequences of Macdonald&#8217;s policies &#8212; both as minister of Indian Affairs and as prime minister &#8212; to this day, Fiddler said.<br />
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In particular, Macdonald was &#8220;instrumental&#8221; in establishing the Indian Residential School system in the late 1800s. Back then, Macdonald insisted aboriginal children must be taken from their families and assimilated into the rest of society, rather than receiving education in their own communities.</p>
<p>&#8220;When the school is on the reserve, the child lives with his parents who are savages; he is surrounded by savages, and though he may learn to read and write, his habits and training and mode of thought are Indian,&#8221; Macdonald said, according to archived documents. &#8220;He is simply a savage who can read and write.&#8221;</p>
<p>That view led to a residential school system that lasted more than 100 years, tearing more than 150,000 First Nations, Metis and Inuit children away from their families and into boarding schools, where they were forbidden to speak their native languages or practice aboriginal culture and often lived in poor conditions. Many suffered abuse. Survivors &#8212; having been isolated from their parents &#8212; didn&#8217;t know how to bond with their own children, passing the trauma from generation to generation, according to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. The commission was established when the Canadian government apologized for the residential school era in 2008.</p>
<p>Without understanding the complete historical picture, &#8220;it&#8217;s simply wrong for Canadians to be celebrating (Macdonald&#8217;s) legacy,&#8221; Fiddler said.</p>
<p>But Fiddler also sees the anniversary as an opportunity for people to learn more about that part of their history, with the hope that education can ultimately lead to reconciliation between aboriginal people and other Canadians.</p>
<p>&#8220;We need to have this conversation,&#8221; he said.</p>
<p>In a statement, the Assembly of First Nations said the anniversary has &#8220;different meanings for different people.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Many Canadians know only the conventional history of Macdonald as a &#8216;father of Confederation,&#8217; yet for many First Nations the legacy of Sir John A. Macdonald is a painful one,&#8221; National Chief Perry Bellegarde said.</p>
<p>&#8220;First Nations are often lectured about &#8216;not living in the past&#8217;, but the decisions, policies and actions that are preventing First Nations from achieving the same quality of life and the full expression of our rights to control our lives and lands have a foundation in the early decisions of the settler governments,&#8221; he continued. &#8220;The commemoration of Sir John A. Macdonald&#8217;s birthday should be an opportunity to commit ourselves to understanding our past so we can understand how we can move forward together to create a country where we all thrive and benefit from the beauty and riches of this land.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Advocates hope &#8216;groundbreaking&#8217; report on aboriginal women will put spotlight on Murdered Aboriginal Women</title>
		<link>https://sttpml.org/canada/advocates-hope-groundbreaking-report-on-aboriginal-women-will-put-spotlight-on-murdered-aboriginal-women/</link>
		<comments>https://sttpml.org/canada/advocates-hope-groundbreaking-report-on-aboriginal-women-will-put-spotlight-on-murdered-aboriginal-women/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Jan 2015 16:42:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[jimcraven]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CANADIAN GOVERNMENT POLICY]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Corrupt Tribal Councils and Genocide]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Masks of Genocide]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Advocates hope &#8216;groundbreaking&#8217; report on aboriginal women will put spotlight on Canada  http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/advocates-hope-groundbreaking-report-on-aboriginal-women-will-put-spotlight-on-canada-1.2184253#.VLUqC0fV0-Y.gmail Canada AM: Native women&#8217;s report Canada AM: Native women&#8217;s report NWAC&#8217;s Vice-president Dawn Harvard shjares her reaction to a report and whether there has been a lack &#8230; <a href="https://sttpml.org/canada/advocates-hope-groundbreaking-report-on-aboriginal-women-will-put-spotlight-on-murdered-aboriginal-women/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
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<h1>Advocates hope &#8216;groundbreaking&#8217; report on aboriginal women will put spotlight on Canada</h1>
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<div id="etsCCGradentDiv_vplayer"> <a tabindex="-1" href="http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/advocates-hope-groundbreaking-report-on-aboriginal-women-will-put-spotlight-on-canada-1.2184253#.VLUqC0fV0-Y.gmail" target="_parent">http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/advocates-hope-groundbreaking-report-on-aboriginal-women-will-put-spotlight-on-canada-1.2184253#.VLUqC0fV0-Y.gmail</a></div>
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<div>Canada AM: Native women&#8217;s report</div>
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<div><a href="javascript:setCurrClipPage(1);playClip(529266);setCurrClipIndex(0);">Canada AM: Native women&#8217;s report</a></div>
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<p><a href="javascript:setCurrClipPage(1);playClip(529266);setCurrClipIndex(0);"><img alt="" src="http://www.ctvnews.ca/polopoly_fs/1.2185864.1421154256!/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/landscape_150/image.jpg" width="110" height="62" /> </a></p>
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<div>NWAC&#8217;s Vice-president Dawn Harvard shjares her reaction to a report and whether there has been a lack of police action.</div>
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<div><a href="javascript:setCurrClipPage(1);playClip(529236);setCurrClipIndex(1);">CTV National News: Growing calls for action</a></div>
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<div>One Toronto artist is drawing on the growing calls for an inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women. John Vennavally-Rao reports.</div>
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<div><a href="javascript:setCurrClipPage(1);playClip(529010);setCurrClipIndex(2);">CTV News: Canada urged to hold nation-wide inquiry</a></div>
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<div>As Robert Fife reports, Canada is being urged to hold a nation-wide inquiry into the murders and disappearances of indigenous women.</div>
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<p><a href="http://www.ctvnews.ca/more/ctvnews-ca-team/marlene-leung-1.818955"> Marlene Leung</a><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><span style="color: #0066cc;">, </span></span>CTVNews.ca</p>
<p><a href="http://twitter.com/MarleneLeung" target="_blank">@MarleneLeung</a></p>
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<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><span style="color: #0066cc;"> Published Monday, January 12, 2015 10:59AM EST </span></span><br />
Last Updated Monday, January 12, 2015 8:50PM EST</p>
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<p>Canada is obligated under international human rights laws to prevent violence against indigenous women by taking measures to address poverty and other socio-economic factors, according to a new report.<br />
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The <a href="http://www.oas.org/en/iachr/reports/pdfs/Indigenous-Women-BC-Canada-en.pdf" target="_blank">report</a><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><span style="color: #0066cc;">, released Monday by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, an arm of the Organization of American States, said Canada&#8217;s history of colonization, inequality and economic and social marginalization are some of the root causes of violence against indigenous women.</span></span></p>
<p>The commission started an investigation into British Columbia&#8217;s missing and murdered aboriginal women in 2013, on a request from the Native Women&#8217;s Association of Canada (NWAC) and the Canadian Feminist Alliance for International Action (FAFIA).</p>
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<p><a title="Report on missing and murdered aboriginal women" href="http://www.ctvnews.ca/polopoly_fs/1.2185206.1421103734!/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/landscape_960/image.jpg"><img title="Report on missing and murdered aboriginal women" alt="Report on missing and murdered aboriginal women" src="http://www.ctvnews.ca/polopoly_fs/1.2185206.1421103734!/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/landscape_225/image.jpg" width="225" height="127" /> </a></p>
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<p><span style="color: #000000;">Dr. Dawn Harvard, right, of the Native Women&#8217;s Association of Canada (NWAC) looks on as Claudette Dumont-Smith, Executive Director of NWAC answers questions as they take part in a press conference on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Monday, Jan. 12, 2015. (Sean Kilpatrick / THE CANADIAN PRESS)</span></p>
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<p>The report, which includes interviews with Canadian government officials, opposition politicians and aboriginal women’s groups, supports the call on the federal government to launch an inquiry into the issue.</p>
<p>&#8220;The IACHR considers that there is much more to understand and to acknowledge in relation to the missing and murdered indigenous women,&#8221; the report said.</p>
<p>&#8220;This initiative must be organized in consultation with indigenous peoples, particularly indigenous women, at all stages.&#8221;</p>
<p>During a news conference Monday morning, NWAC Vice-President Dawn Harvard called the report &#8220;groundbreaking.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;This report is the first in-depth examination of the murders and disappearances (of aboriginal women) by an expert international human rights body,&#8221; she said. &#8220;These women and girls are being stolen from our families and our communities and it is time that somebody is taking this seriously.&#8221;</p>
<p>The RCMP estimated in a report released last year that about 1,200 aboriginal women and girls were murdered or went missing in Canada between 1980 and 2012.</p>
<p><strong>&#8216;Broader pattern&#8217; of violence and discrimination</strong></p>
<p><strong> The report found that the disappearances and murders of indigenous women are part of a &#8220;broader pattern&#8221; of violence and discrimination against aboriginal women in Canada, who are significantly over-represented as victims of homicide. The report also found that they are three times more likely to be victims of violence than non-indigenous women.</strong></p>
<p>It also found the following:</p>
<ul>
<li>Addressing violence against indigenous women is insufficient unless underlying factors of poverty, and racial and gender discrimination are also addressed.</li>
<li>In accordance with international human rights standards, Canada is obliged to continue the investigation of unsolved cases of missing indigenous women.</li>
<li>The federal and provincial governments have a responsibility for the legal status and conditions of aboriginal women, and should provide a co-ordinated national response.</li>
</ul>
<p>Despite calls for a national inquiry, Prime Minister Stephen Harper has repeatedly said that the justice system and police investigations are the best way to deal with the issue.</p>
<p>But Teresa Edwards of the Native Women’s Association of Canada said an inquiry is necessary to get reliable statistics and to understand the breadth of the problem.</p>
<p>Edwards &#8212; who said her group had yet to hear any government response to the report &#8212; also said too many people were dismissing the problem as solely an aboriginal issue, or blaming aboriginal men for the violence.</p>
<p>“What we’ve also discovered, and what this report lays out for Canadians to examine and to research, is that the men committing the crimes aren’t necessarily aboriginal,” Edwards told CTV News Channel said. “A high percentage of our women leave reserves and come to urban centres, and they’re still at risk.”</p>
<p>And at a news conference Monday, chair of the Feminist Alliance for International Action human rights committee Sheila Day said police action after the violence has occurred is only a part of the equation.</p>
<p>“The ground-breaking part of this report says Canada is also obligated to prevent the violence,” Day said. “And in order to prevent the violence, Canada must address the risk factors.”</p>
<p>Harvard said Monday that the NWAC hopes that the new report will put the international spotlight on the government&#8217;s response.</p>
<p>&#8220;It is our hope and our belief that this report will be known and noted around the world, and the response of the Canadian government will be cause for hope for our peoples or for further shame,&#8221; she said. &#8220;And we hope it will be cause for hope and for action to begin new change.&#8221;</p>
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<p>Read more: <a href="http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/advocates-hope-groundbreaking-report-on-aboriginal-women-will-put-spotlight-on-canada-1.2184253#ixzz3Oigg34gx">http://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/advocates-hope-groundbreaking-report-on-aboriginal-women-will-put-spotlight-on-canada-1.2184253#ixzz3Oigg34gx</a></p>
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		<title>Sure, John A. Macdonald was a racist, colonizer and misogynist — but so were most Canadians back then</title>
		<link>https://sttpml.org/canada/sure-john-a-macdonald-was-a-racist-colonizer-and-misogynist-but-so-were-most-canadians-back-then/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Jan 2015 02:27:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[jimcraven]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CANADIAN GOVERNMENT POLICY]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[COLONIALISM]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GENOCIDE]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Masks of Genocide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NAZI EUGENICS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PSYCHOPATHY AND SOCIOPATHY]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[REAL HISTORY EXPOSED]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[&#160; &#160; &#160; Sure, John A. Macdonald was a racist, colonizer and misogynist — but so were most Canadians back then Republish Reprint Republish Online Republish Offline Reprint Tristin Hopper &#124; January 10, 2015 &#124; Last Updated: Jan 10 1:27 AM &#8230; <a href="https://sttpml.org/canada/sure-john-a-macdonald-was-a-racist-colonizer-and-misogynist-but-so-were-most-canadians-back-then/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
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<h1 itemprop="headline">Sure, John A. Macdonald was a racist, colonizer and misogynist — but so were most Canadians back then</h1>
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<p><a itemprop="author" itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/Person" href="http://news.nationalpost.com/author/tristinhopper/"><span style="color: #0066cc;">Tristin Hopper</span></a> | January 10, 2015 | Last Updated: Jan 10 1:27 AM ET<br />
<a href="http://news.nationalpost.com/author/tristinhopper/">More from Tristin Hopper</a> | <a href="http://twitter.com/TristinHopper" target="_blank">@TristinHopper</a></p>
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<p><img alt="Library and Archives Canada" src="http://wpmedia.news.nationalpost.com/2015/01/john-a-macdonald-1.jpg?w=328&amp;h=564" width="328" height="564" /></p>
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<div>Library and Archives CanadaJohn A. Macdonald was aboriginal affairs minister for 10 years — from 1878 to 1888 — and is often blamed for laying the institutional groundwork for today’s First Nations’ troubles.</div>
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<p>In 1887, the first of Vancouver’s many anti-Chinese riots had just broken out when Sir John A. Macdonald stood up in the House of Commons to propose further measures to keep out the Chinese.</p>
<p>The Chinese took white jobs, he said. The Chinese would breed a “mongrel” race in British Columbia and threaten the “Aryan” character of the Dominion. Altogether, the prospect of having white working classes living alongside Chinese could lead only to “evil.”</p>
<p>But in an odd aside, Macdonald admitted that he was supporting the policy largely because he was running a country full of racists.<br />
<span id="more-331"></span><br />
“On the whole, it is considered not advantageous to the country that the Chinese should come and settle in Canada,” said Macdonald. “That may be right or it may be wrong, it may be prejudice or otherwise, but the prejudice is near universal.”</p>
<p>Although they were laying the groundwork for one of the world’s most tolerant nations, the Canadians of 1867 largely took white supremacy for granted. Blacks were barred from staying in Toronto hotels. The average British Columbian saw Asians as a threat to racial purity. And almost everybody was fine with the expectation that the native way of life would soon be extinct.</p>
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<p>On Sir John A. Macdonald’s 200th birthday, the country’s founding prime minister has no shortage of critics to deem him a racist, a colonizer and a misogynist. They’re right on all counts, but the man who founded Canada was the product of an age that made Archie Bunker look like Mohandas Gandhi.</p>
<p>“This is unfair, they didn’t know the things we know,” said Don Smith, a historian at the University of Calgary, responding to modern-day criticism of Macdonald.</p>
<p>Richard Gwyn, the author of a bestselling two-volume biography of Macdonald, warned in a recent piece for The Walrus that Canadians are lazily using the country’s founder as a “scapegoat” for the sins of the past.</p>
<p>“While Macdonald did make mistakes, so did Canadians, collectively,” he said.</p>
<div id="pn_video_1" data-id="1_di3eyvql">http://news.nationalpost.com/2015/01/10/sure-john-a-macdonald-was-was-a-racist-colonizer-and-misogynist-but-so-were-most-canadians-back-then/</div>
<p>Criticisms of Macdonald generally centre on his policies concerning non-white Canadians. In short, he worked to keep out the Chinese, smashed Métis rebellions and set Canadian First Nations on track to decades of poverty and isolation.</p>
<p>But almost nobody gets a pass in 19th century Canada.</p>
<p>George Brown, Macdonald’s chief political rival, had a solid anti-slavery track record and urged racial harmony between Toronto’s whites and blacks.</p>
<p>At the same time, though, he also told Torontonians to distrust Jews, Catholics and the Irish. As refugees from the Irish Famine streamed into British North America, Brown wrote that these half-starved migrants were as much of a curse on Canada as “were the locusts to the land of Egypt.”</p>
<blockquote><p>‘First Nations people in Saskatchewan, I would bet you $5 to a person, consider Macdonald the agent of their subjugation’</p></blockquote>
<p>Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Macdonald’s Liberal successor, was famously responsible for boosting the Chinese head tax to $500 in 1903.</p>
<p>In 1886, Laurier told the House of Commons that it was moral for Canada to take lands from “savage nations” so long as they paid adequate compensation.</p>
<p>A native-ruled Canada would “forever have remained barren and unproductive, but which under civilised rule would afford homes and happiness to teeming millions,” he said.</p>
<p>Below the border, even Abraham Lincoln, Macdonald’s 1860s contemporary, held the view that as soon as the Civil War was over, the United States should get to work shipping all its black people back to Africa.</p>
<p>As the 16th president said in 1858, “there is a physical difference between the white and black races which I believe will forever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality.”</p>
<p>Compared to the age he inhabited, say defenders, Macdonald was comparatively tolerant. He hung out with Irishmen, he had native friends, he urged unity with French speakers and he candidly acknowledged that the Canadian project was not going well for the country’s indigenous inhabitants.</p>
<p>“At all events, the Indians have been great sufferers by the discovery of America, and the transfer to it of a large white population,” he said in 1880.</p>
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<p><img alt="Eldridge Stanton/Library and Archives Canada/PA-" src="http://wpmedia.news.nationalpost.com/2014/05/johna.jpg?w=620&amp;h=465" width="620" height="465" /></p>
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<div>Eldridge Stanton/Library and Archives Canada/PA-Sir John A. Macdonald</div>
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<p>Macdonald oversaw the execution of Louis Riel, yes, but the man had staged two violent rebellions against his government.</p>
<p>“We still admire the way he tried to get Canadians to co-operate,” wrote historian Ged Martin in a recent piece. “But we don’t like the price that had to be paid, in sleaze and pork, to keep the country working together.”</p>
<p>The steepest price, by far, came on the aboriginal file. In addition to being Canada;’s first and longest serving prime minister, Macdonald remains the country’s longest-serving aboriginal affairs minister.</p>
<p>Serving in the post from 1878 to 1888, he laid the groundwork for basically every institution now blamed for the horrid state of Ottawa-aboriginal relations: The Indian Act, Indian Residential Schools and an over-bureaucratized Department of Indian Affairs.</p>
<p>“First Nations people in Saskatchewan, I would bet you $5 to a person, consider Macdonald the agent of their subjugation,” said University of Regina professor James Daschuk.</p>
<p>Last May, Mr. Daschuk, the author of a decidedly anti-Macdonald book, found himself in the somewhat awkward position of winning the Sir John A. Macdonald Prize for non-fiction.</p>
<blockquote><p>‘He didn’t need to be so cruel’</p></blockquote>
<p>That book, <em>Clearing the Plains</em>, based on 20 years of research, outlines how Canada capitalized on famine and disease in the prairies to force native populations to relocate to reserves well away from the coming railroad.</p>
<p>Mr. Daschuk notes that the evidence can still be seen on maps. In the once-populous areas southwest of Regina, there are only two First Nations reserves — both of which were established after the railroad was finished.</p>
<p>It was understandable for Macdonald to build a railroad to British Columbia or even pursue a policy of assimilation. But Mr. Daschuk says that what happened on the plains was needlessly draconian: Natives were barred from selling their agricultural products to white settlers, in some cases they were restricted from using modern farming implements and they could be arrested if found off their reserve without a pass.</p>
<p>“He didn’t need to be so cruel,” said Mr. Daschuk.</p>
<p>But it’s not like he had opponents. When critics accused Macdonald’s government of wasting money on feeding the Cree, the Prime Minister had no qualms in telling the assembled House of Commons that his agents withheld food “until the Indians were on the verge of starvation, to reduce the expense.”</p>
<p>As Don Smith noted in one of the few papers ever drafted on Macdonald’s aboriginal policy, the first Prime Minister was also somewhat progressive in his belief in Aboriginal title as something to be extinguished with treaties.</p>
<p>Other politicians of the era reasoned that the natives had never owned the land in the first place, so it was free for the taking.</p>
<p>In the 1880s, a landmark Ontario court decision ruled that “there is no Indian title in law or in equity. The claim of the Indians is simply moral and no more.”</p>
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<h4>Related</h4>
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<li><a href="http://news.nationalpost.com/2015/01/09/everyone-knows-john-a-macdonald-was-a-bit-of-a-drunk-but-its-largely-forgotten-how-hard-he-hit-the-bottle/">Everyone knows John A. Macdonald was a bit of a drunk, but it’s largely forgotten how hard he hit the bottle</a></li>
<li><a href="http://news.nationalpost.com/2015/01/09/stephen-harper-reflects-on-canadas-first-prime-minister-sir-john-a-macdonald/">Canadians sell the greatness of John A. Macdonald — and our country — short, Stephen Harper says</a></li>
<li><a href="http://news.nationalpost.com/2015/01/08/one-in-four-canadians-cant-name-countrys-first-prime-minister-poll/">One in four Canadians can’t name country’s first prime minister: poll</a></li>
<li><a href="http://news.nationalpost.com/2015/01/09/father-raymond-j-desouza-raise-a-glass-to-sir-john-a/">Father Raymond J. deSouza: Raise a glass to Sir John A.</a></li>
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<p>As the ugly business of nation-building goes, Macdonald can still boast some of history’s cleanest hands.</p>
<p>Unlike Germany’s Otto von Bismarck, Macdonald didn’t unify Canada by engineering a series of bloody foreign wars. He never owned people, like George Washington. And he never personally killed anyone, like Simon Bolivar.</p>
<p>And even within the 19th century British Empire, the devastating relocation of several thousand native peoples was barely a blip.</p>
<p>As Mr. Daschuk noted, the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railroad was occurring at the same time as drought and negligent colonial management was conspiring to kill millions in British India.</p>
<p>But even if Macdonald wins the historical context game, it does not mean he will ever be anything less than an antihero for those Canadians who got the short end of the Confederation stick.</p>
<p>As Anishinaabe academic Hayden King wrote in a Twitter post this week, “’nobody is perfect’ is sooner to be adopted as a national mantra than rejecting [Sir John A. Macdonald] as a villain.”</p>
<p>National Post</p>
<p><em>• Email: <a href="mailto:thopper@nationalpost.com">thopper@nationalpost.com</a> | Twitter: </em></p>
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		<title>APTN&#8217;s Bad Harvest: One of the Many Faces of Genocide the Case of Kainai Blackfoot</title>
		<link>https://sttpml.org/canada/aptns-bad-harvest-one-of-the-many-faces-of-genocide-the-case-of-kainai-blackfoot/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Dec 2014 19:33:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[jimcraven]]></dc:creator>
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		<title>Homeless Indigenous Woman Fined For Building Her Own Home</title>
		<link>https://sttpml.org/canada/homeless-indigenous-woman-fined-for-building-her-own-home/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Nov 2014 14:11:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/thunder-bay/homeless-woman-fined-for-building-her-own-home-1.2824688?cmp=abfb Homeless woman fined for building her own home Darlene Necan says she&#8217;s been made to feel &#8216;awful&#8217; for trying to house herself By Jody Porter, CBC News Posted: Nov 07, 2014 6:00 AM ET Last Updated: Nov 07, 2014 &#8230; <a href="https://sttpml.org/canada/homeless-indigenous-woman-fined-for-building-her-own-home/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
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<p>Homeless woman fined for building her own home Darlene Necan says she&#8217;s been made to feel &#8216;awful&#8217; for trying to house herself</p>
<p>By Jody Porter, CBC News Posted: Nov 07, 2014 6:00 AM ET Last Updated: Nov<br />
07, 2014 3:32 PM ET</p>
<p>&#8220;This is my castle and I&#8217;m so proud to have it,&#8221; Darlene Necan says of the one-room house she built with donated materials on the same spot where she grew up. (Jody Porter/CBC)</p>
<p>A First Nations woman in Northern Ontario faces thousands of dollars in fines and a stop-work order on the cabin she is attempting to build in the place where she grew up.&amp;#8203;</p>
<p>Darlene Necan is a member of the Ojibways of Saugeen First Nation, but she&#8217;s been unable to acquire housing in that community, about 400 kilometres northwest of Thunder Bay, since the reserve was created in the late 1990s.</p>
<p>Homeless First Nations walkers take fight to Ottawa Group builds new cabin for elder living in chicken barn</p>
<p>Last year, Necan began building with donated materials on land where her family home once stood, 20 kilometres south of her reserve, in the unorganized township of Savant Lake, Ont.</p>
<p>&#8220;This is my castle and I&#8217;m so proud to have it, even though it&#8217;s not done yet,&#8221; Necan said during a recent visit to the one-room, plywood house she is not allowed to live in. Darlene Necan cabin interior<br />
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Inside Darlene Necan&#8217;s &#8216;illegal&#8217; cabin. (Jody Porter/CBC)</p>
<p>The Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry has charged Necan with breaches of the Public Lands Act that carry fines of up to $10,000, and up to an additional $1,000 fine each time she is caught continuing to build. Necan believes it is because somehow the place she grew up has become Crown land. The ministry did not respond to questions from CBC News about this story. &#8216;A lot of times I cry&#8217;</p>
<p>As an unorganized township, Savant Lake doesn&#8217;t have a municipal leader. Denis Mousseau owns the only store, across the street from his hotel, on one of the community&#8217;s two main roads.</p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a common thing for First Nations people to do, is build their own house without title to the land,&#8221; Mousseau said. &#8220;First Nations people have the right to do that and I don&#8217;t see why [the Ministry of] Natural Resources should be hassling her over this.&#8221;</p>
<p>Necan has boarded up the unfinished doorway to her cabin for the winter, and said she feels &#8220;shattered&#8221; by the charges against her. Her next court date is Nov. 20. Building supplies in snow</p>
<p>Some of the donated building supplies Darlene Necan was unable to use before a stop-work order was issued. (Jody Porter/CBC)</p>
<p>&amp;#8203;&#8221;I still keep going with this fight no matter how awful it makes me feel for trying to house myself and help people, because a lot of people don&#8217;t believe in themselves or that things can change if you fight hard enough,&#8221; Necan said, her voice cracking.</p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s what I try to believe. I try to be hopeful. That&#8217;s hard too and a lot of times I cry by myself here. But I talk to my [late] mom and my [late] dad and it keeps me going because I keep thinking of them.&#8221; &#8216;Not any better in the city&#8217;</p>
<p>Necan has spent much of her adult life couch-surfing among relatives and camping out on the family trap line when the weather allows. The<br />
55-year-old was looking forward to a different life, living in her own home and offering shelter to family members.</p>
<p>&#8220;This is exactly the same spot where we lived,&#8221; Necan said. &#8220;We slowly started moving to the cities because we didn&#8217;t have anything after my dad got hurt and we were pretty well desperate.&#8221;</p>
<p>Necan&#8217;s father was injured while working for the railway.</p>
<p>&#8220;My family&#8230; they&#8217;re not any better in the city than they were here,&#8221; she says. &#8220;Here, at least they were free to roam around in the bush and go hunting and all that, but in the city you need at least five, 10 bucks to even live for the day.&#8221; &#8216;Aren&#8217;t we under treaty?&#8217;</p>
<p>Fewer than 100 people live on the reserve up the road. Edward Machimity has been chief for nearly two decades, since the reserve was created. Necan said he refuses to help her, or even answer her questions.</p>
<p>&#8220;He has said that he has to be careful about how he helps the off-reserve people and that really got me confused because I thought, aren&#8217;t we on Anishinaabe land right now? Aren&#8217;t we under treaty?&#8221; Necan said.</p>
<p>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t this why we elected him for, is to help all people, not only the people inside reserve? That is so crap because natives are scattered all over Canada. How can they say only the people on reserve have rights?&#8221;</p>
<p>Machimity did not return repeated calls from CBC News.</p>
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		<title>Canada Is The Only UN Member To Reject Landmark Indigenous Rights Document</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Oct 2014 00:38:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[jimcraven]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CANADIAN GOVERNMENT POLICY]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[COLONIALISM]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Corrupt Tribal Councils and Genocide]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[OPPOSE CORRUPTION]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[REAL HISTORY EXPOSED]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Canada Is The Only UN Member To Reject Landmark Indigenous Rights Document Posted: 10/02/2014 4:52 pm EDT Updated: 10/03/2014 9:59 pm EDT Canada singled itself out as the only country to raise objections over a landmark United Nations document re-establishing the protection of &#8230; <a href="https://sttpml.org/canada/canada-is-the-only-un-member-to-reject-landmark-indigenous-rights-document/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
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<h1 class="title">Canada Is The Only UN Member To Reject Landmark Indigenous Rights Document</h1>
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<div class="times"><span class="posted">Posted: <time datetime="2014-10-02T16:52:12-04:00">10/02/2014 4:52 pm EDT </time></span><span class="updated">Updated: <time datetime="2014-10-03T21:59:07-04:00">10/03/2014 9:59 pm EDT</time></span></div>
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<p>Canada singled itself out as the only country to raise objections over a landmark United Nations document re-establishing the protection of the rights of indigenous people last week. It was a gesture one prominent First Nation leader called “saddening, surprising.”</p>
<p>“Canada was viewed always as a country that upheld human rights,” said Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations Chief Perry Bellegarde. “For Canada to be the only nation state to get up to make a caveat on the vote – that’s very telling.”</p>
<p>Bellegarde travelled to New York City to attend a special UN General Assembly meeting of more than 1,000 delegates and heads of state for the first-ever World Conference on Indigenous Peoples on Sept. 22 and 23.</p>
<p>On day one, nations voted on the adoption of <a href="http://www.un.org/en/ga/69/meetings/indigenous/pdf/WCIP-CFs-on-Draft-Outcome-Document.pdf" target="_hplink">the document</a> – the first vote of its kind after the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was introduced in 2007.<br />
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In his opening remarks, <a href="http://www.un.org/sg/statements/index.asp?nid=8015" target="_hplink">Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon </a>spoke about the document’s significance, saying it helps “set minimum standards for the survival, dignity and well-being of indigenous peoples” – more than 370 million around the world.</p>
<p>“I expect member states to meet their commitments, including by carrying out national action plans to realize our shared vision,” he told delegates.</p>
<p>The United States, who was among four nations (including Canada) who opposed the adoption of the original declaration seven years ago, notably reversed its position. President Barack Obama threw his administration’s support behind <a href="http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2010/12/obama-supports-un-on-indigenous-peoples-rights-we-can-move-forward/" target="_hplink">the declaration</a>, regarding it as one that will &#8220;help reaffirm the principles that should guide our future.&#8221;</p>
<p>The document was adopted by all nations by consensus last week, but Canada was the only country to file its objections, flagging the wording of “free, prior and informed consent” as problematic.</p>
<p>Free, prior, and informed consent is commonly upheld as a key principle in international law. But according to Ottawa, it’s tricky wording that could be interpreted as “<a href="http://www.canadainternational.gc.ca/prmny-mponu/canada_un-canada_onu/statements-declarations/other-autres/2014-09-22_WCIPD-PADD.aspx" target="_hplink">a veto to aboriginal groups</a> and in that regard, cannot be reconciled with Canadian law, as it exists.”</p>
<p>“As a result, Canada cannot associate itself with the elements contained in this outcome document related to free, prior and informed consent,” the government explained in a statement.</p>
<p><strong>‘Deeply Concerning’</strong></p>
<p>Interim Assembly of First Nations Chief Ghislain Picard called the government’s objections “deeply concerning,” adding “Canada continues to embarrass itself and isolate itself on the world stage by offering to explain their vote.”</p>
<p>In the feds’ explanation, the word “veto” pops up three times, and Bellegarde says that’s inaccurate.</p>
<p>“Veto does not exist in the declaration anywhere,” Bellegarde said. “Why are they misleading and using that word?”</p>
<p>In 2007, Ottawa <a href="http://www.aadnc-aandc.gc.ca/aiarch/mr/nr/s-d2007/2-2936-eng.asp" target="_hplink">first used the same “veto” explanation</a> in its statement rejecting the UN declaration.</p>
<p>Then in 2010, despite rejecting the declaration three years earlier, the federal government <a href="http://www.aadnc-aandc.gc.ca/eng/1309374239861/1309374546142" target="_hplink">issued a statement</a> saying: “We are now confident that Canada can interpret the principles expressed in the Declaration in a manner that is consistent with our Constitution and legal framework.”</p>
<p>Fast-forward to today and First Nation leaders, including Bellegarde, say they’re flabbergasted over the government’s flip-flopping and contradictory statements.</p>
<p>Bellegarde, who announced his candidacy for Assembly of First Nations chief on Wednesday, told The Huffington Post Canada in an interview the Harper government failed to consult with aboriginal groups in “any forums, any meetings, any dialogues” prior to the two-day UN conference.</p>
<p>He brought up recent decisions from Canada’s own Supreme Court which upheld aboriginal rights and titles and reinforced the necessity to obtain consent from aboriginal people on issues pertaining to property rights and claims.</p>
<p>In <a href="http://scc-csc.lexum.com/scc-csc/scc-csc/en/item/14246/index.do?r=AAAAAQAYVHNpbGhxb3QnaW4gRmlyc3QgTmF0aW9uAAAAAAE" target="_hplink">Tsilhqot’in Nation vs. British Columbia</a>, a ruling written by Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin, it clearly states government and other agencies who desire access to land conferred by aboriginal titles “must obtain the consent of the Aboriginal title holders.”</p>
<p>“This relationship between this government, our Crown, and Canada and its indigenous peoples does not have to be so unnecessarily adversarial,” Bellegarde said.</p>
<p><strong>Strained Relations ‘Persistently Unresolved’</strong></p>
<p>Prime Minister Stephen Harper did not join Bellegarde at the UN conference, nor did Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Minister Bernard Valcourt. Environment Minister Leona Aglukkaq was in New York at the time, but opted to attend UN climate summit meetings.</p>
<p>Instead, new aboriginal affairs deputy minister Colleen Swords was sent to represent Canada.</p>
<p>Bellegarde said he pressed Swords for a clearer explanation of what “veto” means in the context of the non-legally binding UN outcome document and its application to Canadian law.</p>
<p>“No adequate response given back,” Bellegarde said.</p>
<p>The Huffington Post Canada asked Valcourt’s office for an explanation of Canada’s stance on the outcome document and received a written response.</p>
<p>“Our government is focused on working with aboriginal communities on our shared priorities, and we have in place a constitutionally-entrenched framework that ensures the consultation and accommodation, as appropriate, of aboriginal interests. This framework also balances the interests of non-aboriginal Canadians and it has served as a model for nations around the world,” read the statement.</p>
<p>Valcourt’s office also repurposed one line from UN human rights investigator James Anaya’s 22-page report from earlier this year about Canada’s relationship with its indigenous peoples.</p>
<p>“To quote the report of the UN Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples ‘…Canada has taken determined action to address ongoing aspects of the history of misdealing and harm inflicted on aboriginal peoples in the country, a necessary step towards helping to remedy their current disadvantage,’” read the email.</p>
<p>However, Valcourt’s office failed to acknowledge that in the same <a href="http://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/IPeoples/SR/A.HRC.27.52.Add.2.doc" target="_hplink">July 2014 report</a>, Anaya concluded: “The numerous initiatives that have been taken at the federal and provincial/territorial levels to address the problems faced by indigenous peoples have been insufficient.</p>
<p>“The well-being gap between aboriginal and non-aboriginal people in Canada has not narrowed over the past several years; treaty and aboriginal claims remain persistently unresolved; indigenous women and girls remain vulnerable to abuse; and overall there appear to be high levels of distrust among indigenous peoples towards the government at both the federal and provincial levels.”</p>
<p>See whole article at <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2014/10/02/canada-un-indigenous-rights_n_5918868.html">http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2014/10/02/canada-un-indigenous-rights_n_5918868.html</a></p>
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<p>ADDITIONAL READING FROM STTPML:</p>
<p><a href="http://sttpml.org/parts-i-and-ii-combined-breathtaking-hubris-and-hypocrisy-the-real-nature-and-foundations-of-anglo-american-imperiums/">http://sttpml.org/parts-i-and-ii-combined-breathtaking-hubris-and-hypocrisy-the-real-nature-and-foundations-of-anglo-american-imperiums/</p>
<p>http://sttpml.org/redskins-the-origin-of-the-word-and-genocide-behind-it/</p>
<p>http://sttpml.org/the-cia-and-wanted-nazi-war-criminals/</p>
<p>http://sttpml.org/papers-at-the-university-of-minnesota-center-for-holocaust-and-genocide-studies/</p>
<p>http://sttpml.org/canada/wasichu-the-continuing-indian-wars/</p>
<p>http://sttpml.org/nation-building-in-indian-country-the-blackfoot-constitutional-review-by-taiawagi-helton/</p>
<p>http://sttpml.org/indigenous-approaches-to-economic-development-and-sustainability-lecture-at-yunnan-university-china/</p>
<p>http://sttpml.org/corruption-and-genocide-in-indian-country-the-case-of-the-blood-kainai-blackfoot/</p>
<p>http://sttpml.org/canada/the-horrifying-anglo-american-roots-of-nazi-eugenics/</p>
<p>http://sttpml.org/canada/cooking-the-history-books-the-thanksgiving-massacre-anglo-american-genocide-the-father-and-slavery-the-mother/</p>
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		<title>The RCMP, the Highway of Tears, and a Prime Minister Who Doesn&#8217;t Care</title>
		<link>https://sttpml.org/canada/the-rcmp-the-highway-of-tears-and-a-prime-minister-who-doesnt-care/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Sep 2014 16:19:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[jimcraven]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CANADIAN GOVERNMENT POLICY]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[GENOCIDE]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[MAINSTREAM MEDIA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Masks of Genocide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[OPPOSE CORRUPTION]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[REAL HISTORY EXPOSED]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[STATE SPONSORED TERRORISM]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WHISTLE-BLOWERS]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The RCMP, the Highway of Tears, and a Prime Minister Who Doesn’t Care DERRICK ON SEPTEMBER 22ND, 2014 4:46 PM &#8211; http://westcoastnativenews.com/the-rcmp-the-highway-of-tears-and-a-prime-minister-who-doesnt-care/ By Samuel Vargo The first and only sweep of the North Saskatchewan River on Sept. 3 resulted in the &#8230; <a href="https://sttpml.org/canada/the-rcmp-the-highway-of-tears-and-a-prime-minister-who-doesnt-care/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>The RCMP, the Highway of Tears, and a Prime Minister Who Doesn’t Care</h1>
<div>DERRICK ON SEPTEMBER 22ND, 2014 4:46 PM &#8211; <a href="http://westcoastnativenews.com/the-rcmp-the-highway-of-tears-and-a-prime-minister-who-doesnt-care/">http://westcoastnativenews.com/the-rcmp-the-highway-of-tears-and-a-prime-minister-who-doesnt-care/</a><a title="Comment on The RCMP, the Highway of Tears, and a Prime Minister Who Doesn’t Care" href="http://westcoastnativenews.com/the-rcmp-the-highway-of-tears-and-a-prime-minister-who-doesnt-care/#respond"><br />
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<p><a href="http://westcoastnativenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/The-RCMP-the-Highway-of-Tears-and-a-Prime-Minister-Who-Doesnt-Care.jpg"><img title="The RCMP, the Highway of Tears, and a Prime Minister Who Doesn't Care" alt="" src="http://westcoastnativenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/The-RCMP-the-Highway-of-Tears-and-a-Prime-Minister-Who-Doesnt-Care.jpg" width="620" height="349" /></a></p>
<p>By Samuel Vargo</p>
<p>The first and only sweep of the North Saskatchewan River on Sept. 3 resulted in the discovery of a body. The cadaver was found only 15 minutes into the search, and stretches of the river outside the Edmonton city limits were explored.</p>
<p>Conducted by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), along with firefighters and park rangers, the search wasn’t launched to find anyone in particular. It was just a way for these officials to test the water, riversides and islets for human remains. Late summer was a good time to conduct this expedition — with the water level of the river low. The North Saskatchewan River’s shoreline, along with sand bars, gravel bars, and any place where a floating body could come to a rest were perused and investigated.</p>
<p>The victim’s name and any other pertinent information regarding the discovery of this corpse in the river was not disclosed by Canadian law enforcement officials. The case remains under investigation, according to reports.</p>
<p>Welcome to the horror show: Canada has become a country of innumerable ugly fatal horrors – real <em>The Silence of the Lambs</em> sort of stuff – with around 1,200 missing and murdered indigenous women reported and/or discovered during the span of the past few decades. And all this has resulted into a game of political football for the country’s national political leaders.<br />
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What happens when the Prime Minister of a country is a Pontius Pilate, washing his hands of the blood from a whole cross-section of his country’s populace? And what happens when the police are allegedly and believed to be raping and killing defenseless and powerless aboriginal women? And what if this RCMP is actually a malevolent police organization, serving as the nation’s elite police force?</p>
<p>Yes, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police are Canada’s premiere police outfit – but under Stephen Harper, Canada’s Conservative Party Prime Minister – the RCMP has reportedly been acting, and reacting, more like an army of thugs – as far as many indigenous people are concerned.</p>
<p>According to <em>APTN National News</em>: “The RCMP has been blasted by a human rights organization for failing to protect Indigenous women in northern British Columbia, including the victims of the Highway of Tears, where dozens have been murdered or gone missing.” (See:<a href="http://aptn.ca/news/2013/02/13/report-alleges-rcmp-officers-gang-raped-b-c-woman-calls-for-action/">http://aptn.ca/news/2013/02/13/report-alleges-rcmp-officers-gang-raped-b-c-woman-calls-for-action/</a>)</p>
<p>[The Highway of Tears murders is a series of unsolved murders and disappearances of young women along the 800 km (500 mi) section of <a title="British Columbia Highway 16" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Columbia_Highway_16">Highway 16</a> between <a title="Prince George, British Columbia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_George,_British_Columbia">Prince George</a> and <a title="Prince Rupert, British Columbia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_Rupert,_British_Columbia">Prince Rupert</a>, <a title="British Columbia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Columbia">British Columbia</a>, <a title="Canada" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada">Canada</a> from 1969 until 2011. Police list the number of victims at 18, but estimates by aboriginal organizations range into the 40s, largely because they include women who disappeared a greater distance from the highway. (See:<a title="en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highway_of_Tears_murders" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highway_of_Tears_murders" target="_blank">en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highway_of_Tears_murders</a> )]</p>
<p>“‘I feel so dirty. They threatened that if I told anybody they would take me out to the mountains and kill me, and make it look like an accident,’ according to one woman, who told Human Rights Watch that in July 2012, four police officers took her to a remote location and raped her. She said it wasn’t the first time; and that police officers had raped her before and threatened to kill her if she said anything.” (See ibid: <a href="http://aptn.ca/news/2013/02/13/report-alleges-rcmp-officers-gang-raped-b-c-woman-calls-for-action/">http://aptn.ca/news/2013/02/13/report-alleges-rcmp-officers-gang-raped-b-c-woman-calls-for-action/</a>))</p>
<p>Results of interviews conducted by Human Rights Watch with 50 Indian women last summer raises some daunting questions about the integrity of the RCMP. This leading advocacy group for human rights did their homework, alright. And it was an in-depth and comprehensive report – hardly vague, cursory, or sketchy. “Human Rights Watch conducted an additional 37 interviews with families of murdered and missing women, indigenous leaders, community service providers, and others across 10 communities.” (See: <a href="http://aptn.ca/news/2013/02/13/report-alleges-rcmp-officers-gang-raped-b-c-woman-calls-for-action/">http://aptn.ca/news/2013/02/13/report-alleges-rcmp-officers-gang-raped-b-c-woman-calls-for-action/</a>)</p>
<p>“The report also claims Mounties have sexually assaulted Aboriginal women. Human Rights Watch issued an 89-page report filled with details and first-hand accounts from women who allege they’ve been raped by Mounties, victims of excessive force and other abusive treatment. (See ibid: <a href="http://aptn.ca/news/2013/02/13/report-alleges-rcmp-officers-gang-raped-b-c-woman-calls-for-action/">http://aptn.ca/news/2013/02/13/report-alleges-rcmp-officers-gang-raped-b-c-woman-calls-for-action/</a>)</p>
<p>According to <em>Indigenous Nationhood</em>, “The most disturbing of all reports is the 2013 report entitled <em>Those Who Take Us Away: Abusive Policing and Failures in Protection of Indigenous Women and Girls in Northern British Colombia</em>, prepared by Human Rights Watch. This report concluded that Indigenous women and girls are not only “under-protected” by the RCMP, but are, in fact, the objects of RCMP abuse. They highlighted the many allegations of RCMP officers sexually exploiting and abusing young Indigenous girls. There are reports of confinement, rape, and sexual assault on Indigenous girls, and some have led to lawsuits. They also reported on a class-action lawsuit against the RCMP by its own female officers – for sexual harassment and gender discrimination.” (See: <a title="indigenousnationhood.blogspot.com/2014/05/deja-vu-rcmp-report-on-murdered-and.html" href="http://indigenousnationhood.blogspot.com/2014/05/deja-vu-rcmp-report-on-murdered-and.html" target="_blank">click here</a> )</p>
<p>“The threat of domestic and random violence on one side, and mistreatment by RCMP officers on the other, leaves indigenous women in a constant state of insecurity,” said <a href="http://www.hrw.org/bios/meghan-rhoad">Meghan Rhoad</a>, women’s rights researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Where can they turn for help when the police are known to be unresponsive and, in some cases, abusive.” reads another article, “Canada: Abusive Policing, Neglect Along ‘Highway of Tears’” (See: <a title="www.hrw.org/news/2013/02/13/canada-abusive-policing-neglect-along-highway-tears" href="http://www.hrw.org/news/2013/02/13/canada-abusive-policing-neglect-along-highway-tears" target="_blank">click here</a>)</p>
<p>But there’s evidence there are other dynamics at play with these disappearances and murders, and the RCMP cannot take on all the blame. But with such blatant evidence being exposed by Human Rights Watch, the RCMP cannot be seen as a scapegoat, either.</p>
<p>Case in point: On Tuesday, Sept. 16, Canada’s youngest serial killer, Cody Legebokoff, was sentenced for the murders of Jill Stuchenko, 35, Cynthia Maas, 35, Natasha Montgomery, 23, and 15 year old Loren Leslie. Justice Glen Parrett handed down the sentence in a Prince George court room, after jurors deliberated for nearly a full day, coming to their guilty verdict. Legebokoff killed the four young women around the Prince George area within a 14-month span in 2009 and it wasn’t until November 2010 when the first murder charge was laid against him. In October 2011, three more charges were laid against him, and at the time, he was only 21 years old. (See: <a title="www.kelownanow.com/news/bc_news/news/Provincial/14/09/16/Canada_s_Youngest_Serial_Killer_Sentenced_to_Life_in_Prison" href="http://www.kelownanow.com/news/bc_news/news/Provincial/14/09/16/Canada_s_Youngest_Serial_Killer_Sentenced_to_Life_in_Prison" target="_blank">click here</a>)</p>
<p>The courtroom was packed for Legebokoff’s sentencing, as the Crown asked the serial killer to be placed on the National Sex Offender Registry. During sentencing, B.C. Supreme Court Justice Glen Parrett said the “faint hope clause” would be applied to Legebokoff, which could allow him to apply for parole after serving 15 years in prison. The provision was repealed in 2011 for multiple murders, but the murders in this case were committed before the law was changed. (See: <a title="www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/cody-legebokoff-sentenced-to-life-on-4-counts-of-1st-degree-murder-1.2768118" href="http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/cody-legebokoff-sentenced-to-life-on-4-counts-of-1st-degree-murder-1.2768118" target="_blank">click here</a>)</p>
<p>“I just bit my lip, as you can see,” was the reaction to the comments about parole from Doug Leslie, the father of 15-year-old Loren Leslie. (See: <a title="www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/cody-legebokoff-sentenced-to-life-on-4-counts-of-1st-degree-murder-1.2768118" href="http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/cody-legebokoff-sentenced-to-life-on-4-counts-of-1st-degree-murder-1.2768118" target="_blank">click here</a> )</p>
<p>A movement, “Am I Next?’ has been launched in the world of social media by Canadian aboriginal women. Begun by Holly Jarrett of Hamilton, Ontario, Jarret’s impetus for beginning this online movement was that her cousin falls into the Canadian missing and murdered indigenous woman class. Jarrett is a cousin of Loretta Saunders, who was, at the time of her murder, a graduate student at St. Mary’s University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Loretta Saunders was allegedly murdered earlier this year by her tenants, when she went to collect rent. But there are some mysterious circumstances surrounding her disappearance, including the fact that the 26-year-old, pregnant Saunders had been researching the issue of missing and murdered indigenous women in Canada for her thesis when she went missing herself. (For more, see:<a href="http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2014/09/09/am-i-next-indigenous-women-canada-ask-social-media-156814">http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2014/09/09/am-i-next-indigenous-women-canada-ask-social-media-156814 )</a></p>
<p>“Our family is Inuit, and Loretta has now become one of the over 1,186 missing or murdered Aboriginal women she was fighting for,” wrote Jarrett on Change.org. “It is time for our government to address this epidemic of violence against Aboriginal women. Our family is gathering strength and we will not let her death be in vain. We will fight to complete Loretta’s unfinished work.” (See ibid: <a title="indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2014/09/09/am-i-next-indigenous-women-canada-ask-social-media-156814" href="http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2014/09/09/am-i-next-indigenous-women-canada-ask-social-media-156814" target="_blank">click here</a>)</p>
<p>And what’s Stephen Harper doing about this problem? Well, evidently, the Prime Minister doesn’t even consider it a problem, if his actions are indicative of the way he feels about this horrific and nefarious monster unleashed on the poor Indian women of Canada.</p>
<p>Canada’s political leaders are also vilifying P.M. Harper for his insensitivity, callousness, and utter disregard for human life. “This is not acceptable in a country like Canada. It is time for a full public inquiry into the root causes of so many deaths and disappearances of aboriginal women and girls. It is time for a national action plan to confront this issue,” David Langtry, acting chief commissioner of the Canadian Human Rights Commission, said in a statement issued on Aug. 19.</p>
<p>But insensitive and bull-headed Harper wants nothing to do with such a proposal. The Conservative government refused this much-needed national inquiry, despite pressure from Canada’s aboriginal leaders, its provinces’ government leaders and other federal officials. Harper said during the third full week of August that Fontaine’s death was a crime and should not be viewed as a “sociological phenomenon.”</p>
<p>“We should view it as crime. It is crime against innocent people, and it needs to be addressed as such,” Harper said.</p>
<p>Stephen Harper, along with other federal Conservative Party leaders, have stated that they want to address the missing and murdered aboriginal women issue through aboriginal justice programs and through the national DNA missing person index. Leaving the investigations into what some estimate to be more than 1,200 missing and murdered aboriginal women to a police organization that many feel has a culpability in some of this criminal activity, indicates that Prime Minister Stephen Harper is covering for the RCMP. Harper’s solution? It’s the <em>let the fox watch the henhouse </em>mentality – which is disgusting, nauseating, and absolutely unacceptable!</p>
<p>“As Canadians, I believe we want to look after each other, and I think we want to protect the most vulnerable, especially missing and murdered aboriginal women from being victimized,” said Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger. “It’s an issue that affects communities all across Canada.”</p>
<p>“For Stephen Harper to say that there’s not a systemic aspect to this, I think is just — I think it’s outrageous quite frankly,” said Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne on Aug. 22,</p>
<p>A heartbreaking discovery on Aug. 8: finding 15-year-old Tina Fontaine’s corpse in the Red River in Winnipeg. Fontaine’s little body was stuffed in a bag.</p>
<p>Fontaine, who was originally from the Sagkeeng First Nation, had only been in Winnipeg less than a month. She ran away from foster care, something she’d done several times over the past year, but until the time her body was discovered, the girl had always been returned safely back to the living facility which housed her. Ms. Fontaine’s case is being considered a homicide and authorities have not disclosed whether the child was sexually assaulted.</p>
<p>The grisly discovery of Fontaine’s remains has spurred Canadian political leaders to consider conducting an inquiry into the country’s missing aboriginal women. But leave it to Prime Minister Stephen Harper to be a political butcher to this very important matter. According to CNC News Calgary: “Despite Canada’s premiers and territorial leaders endorsing calls for a public inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women last year, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said on Thursday (Aug. 21) that the issue should not be viewed as a sociological phenomenon, but rather as crime.” (See: <a href="http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/stephen-harper-s-refusal-of-national-inquiry-shows-canada-s-shame-metis-leader-1.2744889">http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/stephen-harper-s-refusal-of-national-inquiry-shows-canada-s-shame-metis-leader-1.2744889</a> )</p>
<p>“Tina must not disappear into the oblivion of statistics: almost 1,200 missing and murdered aboriginal women over the past three decades,” Langtry said in the recent Human Rights Watch statement.</p>
<p>With emotions still running high three weeks after Fontaine’s body was discovered and feeling relief that there had been hints of a national roundtable being planned to discuss issues and concerns around Canada’s missing and murdered aboriginal women, a peaceful protest camp was set up in Winnipeg’s Memorial Park. The weekend camp quickly grew from a modest four tents to more than 50 tents.</p>
<p>“I’m pretty emotional about it,” said Chelsea Cardinal, who was crafting moose-head medicine bags at the camp. Cardinal, who is a mother and a social worker, admitted that the federal government’s plan to initiate a roundtable discussion on this salient issue – facing all aboriginal Canadian women – could be seen as a partial victory in a war that has claimed so many of the lives of her sisters. (See: <a title="redpowermedia.wordpress.com/2014/09/09/protest-of-missing-murdered-women-ends-with-some-hope-for-future/" href="http://redpowermedia.wordpress.com/2014/09/09/protest-of-missing-murdered-women-ends-with-some-hope-for-future/" target="_blank">click here</a> )</p>
<p>“It’s the shame of Canada now that people realize what’s happening in this beautiful country,” said Muriel Stanley Venne, a human rights activist and Metis leader in Edmonton. “This is my country and I’m ashamed of the fact that there’s so many of our women that are murdered on a kind of regular basis.” (See ibid: <a href="http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/stephen-harper-s-refusal-of-national-inquiry-shows-canada-s-shame-metis-leader-1.2744889">http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/stephen-harper-s-refusal-of-national-inquiry-shows-canada-s-shame-metis-leader-1.2744889</a> )</p>
<p>In this writer’s opinion, Stephen Harper should answer to issues like the missing and murdered aboriginal women in cold, hard, factual political and humanitarian terms. Much more action is needed besides a roundtable of national leaders discussing missing and murdered Indian women. It should be made a top issue of Harper’s government, not sloughed off, like this irresponsible and arrogant buffoon has shown in his words and actions.</p>
<p>And I laughed very bitterly when I heard that a B’nai Brith executive said he plans to nominate Harper for the Nobel Peace Prize. I thought to myself, <em>Why doesn’t Frank Dimant nominate some ISIS leader to receive the Nobel? To me, a mixed-blood Indian and a supporter of Idle No More and the American Indian Movement, it makes just as much sense.</em></p>
<p>Meantime, it’s business as usual for Harper and his Conservative Party. As long as there’s another large virgin forest to destroy so dirty crude can be sucked out of the soil around the trees’ roots, he’s one very happy camper. Anyone who is so intent on destroying God’s creation certainly has put no value on human life, and being the kind of nasty bully Prime Minister Harper has shown himself to be — in many areas of the Canadian body politic — it’s apropos that this egregious maniac pick on such a poor, defenseless, and almost voiceless subsection of Canada’s population — aboriginal women, along with young Indian girls<em>.</em></p>
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		<title>Canada&#8217;s Trails of Tears and Corruption in Indian Country</title>
		<link>https://sttpml.org/canada/canadas-trails-of-tears-and-corruption-in-indian-country/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 21 Sep 2014 07:44:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[jimcraven]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CANADIAN GOVERNMENT POLICY]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Corrupt Tribal Councils and Genocide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CORRUPTION]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[OPPOSE CORRUPTION]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PSYCHOPATHY AND SOCIOPATHY]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[REAL HISTORY EXPOSED]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[STATE SPONSORED TERRORISM]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Twila Eagle Bear-Singer Removed Play video 7Feb/14, Kainai High School, Blood Tribe Reserve, Treaty7, Twila is removed from spectators&#8217; stand by Blood Tribe Police at Stephen Harper speaking event. Police claim her tweets made her ineligible… 00:02:27 Added on 2/07/14 &#8230; <a href="https://sttpml.org/canada/canadas-trails-of-tears-and-corruption-in-indian-country/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Twila Eagle Bear-Singer Removed</p>
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<div id="mpfmgAEG6YQxB5BGBxdidZ19FoA2_hmlvControl_01_video_desc">7Feb/14, Kainai High School, Blood Tribe Reserve, Treaty7, Twila is removed from spectators&#8217; stand by Blood Tribe Police at Stephen Harper speaking event. Police claim her tweets made her ineligible…</div>
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<p>In Southern Alberta, Harper and Duncan received names and head dresses from the Blood #148 and the Piegan #147 Indian Reserves; contrary to values, beliefs and traditions of the Blackfoot Confederacy.</p>
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<p>According to the traditionalists and Nii tsii ta pii ko waiks, these bestowments should never have occurred. The community of the Blood Indian Reserve have refused to acknowledge the bestowment and is viewed as treason and blasphemy according to the teachings of the Blackfoot Nation.</p>
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<p>These two individuals(Harper and Duncan) are advocates of Genocide!  Current Aboriginal Affairs Minister Valcourt also believes and implements genocide.</p>
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<span style="text-decoration: underline;">Valcourt has received all the information about corruption on the Blood Indian Reserve and refuses to intervene or request an investigation. </span></p>
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<div>In the Blood Tribe Lands Department, the Director along with its Committee members are using this department to launder kickbacks and is shared by the Chief, Chairman and Elliot Fox. They charge a $13 an acre signing fee;  it is reported that the Reserve has at least<b><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> 200,000 </span></b>acres under cultivation.</div>
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<div>If this amount is accurate (200,000 x $13.00 per acre) = <span class="ecxApple-style-span" style="font-size: large;"><b><span style="text-decoration: underline;">$2.6 million dollars unaccounted for annually</span></b></span>. These cheques were not obtained by the Tribal auditors &#8211; Meyers, North and Penny &#8211; Lethbridge, Alberta;  they were shared by one of the farmer&#8217;s book keeper; &#8220;she was told to keep quiet about these cheques or they will  not be allowed to farm on the Reservation&#8221;. Many of the farmers have indicated they have had to pay this amount and is still currently being practiced.</div>
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<p>We were able to locate copies of cancelled cheques 1 farmer paid to Elliot Fox, copies are on this link, they go back to 2001.</p>
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<div><a href="http://sttpml.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/Lands-Fraud-Cheques.pdf" target="_blank">http://sttpml.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/Lands-Fraud-Cheques.pdf</a></div>
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<div>Another issue that has surfaced was the First Nations Education announcement on February 7th.2014 at the Kainai High School, Chief Weaselhead and his Councillors endorsed this deal. Community  members were shocked to hear that the Blood Tribe has agreed to this legislation. The community was never informed and knew nothing about it. Some of the youth who showed up to ask questions were escorted out, a link is enclosed for your information.</div>
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<div><a href="http://warriorpublications.wordpress.com/2014/02/07/harper-visits-blood-rez-women-forcibly-removed-for-tweeting/" target="_blank">http://warriorpublications.wordpress.com/2014/02/07/harper-visits-blood-rez-women-forcibly-removed-for-tweeting/</a></div>
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<h1>Piikani unrest</h1>
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BY MABELL, DAVE ON SEPTEMBER 25, 2014.</p>
<p><a href=" http://lethbridgeherald.com/news/local-news/2014/09/25/piikani-unrest"> http://lethbridgeherald.com/news/local-news/2014/09/25/piikani-unrest</a>/</p>
<p>Dave Mabell</p>
<p>Lethbridge Herald -BROCKET</p>
<p><a href="mailto:dmabell@lethbridgeherald.com">dmabell@lethbridgeherald.com</a></p>
<p>With a band election scheduled this winter, members of a local First Nation are demanding that their council – with just seven members, and no chief – scrap its plans for a new hockey rink.</p>
<p>Piikani Nation member Dominic Crowshoe, describing “third world” conditions on the reserve at Brocket, vowed Wednesday to raise a teepee on band administration land in protest of decisions being made by seven council members as their terms near an end.</p>
<p>Although the Piikani received $64 million in compensation for loss of land when the Oldman Dam was built, he said band members are no better off. Crowshoe said council has not effectively addressed unemployment, alcohol and drug abuse issues.</p>
<p>Piikani member Angela Wolf Tail, speaking at a small gathering outside the band’s Administration Building, called on band members “to join me in standing against the corruption that has plagued our nation.”</p>
<p>She told reporters a group of seven council members is too few to pass or alter band council resolutions. Now a non-member – a federal judge – will be making decisions about the community’s future.</p>
<p>Elected chief Gayle Strikes With A Gun was suspended in 2012 over allegations of nepotism and a conflict of interest in dealing with a financial transfer. She was later ousted, leaving the band council without its leader.</p>
<p>Wolf Tail called on Piikani members to vote against their council’s plan to use $2 million of the $64 million received in 2002 to build an ice sports facility.</p>
<p>That money, she said, “can be better spent on building a homeless shelter, and a few homes for those who need them most.</p>
<p>“We still live in poverty,” she said. “Masking our homes with siding doesn’t cover up the insides of these homes, where up to three or more families are living in one house.”</p>
<p>A vote on changes to the band’s “custom election bylaw” should not be on the same ballot as the ice arena question, she added. Band council has ordered a referendum on Oct. 6 and 7, asking for project approval as well as a decision on whether the next council should consist of a chief and 12 councillors, or just eight.</p>
<p>As well, voters will be asked if council’s term should be reduced from four years to three.</p>
<p>Wolf Tail also spoke against band council’s decision to invite a Court of Queen’s Bench justice to rule on aspects of a Piikani Investment Corporation proposal. She said it involves a debt of more than $14 million.</p>
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<div class="meta-bar-time-group"><span class="meta-bar-date">September 19, 2014</span> <span class="meta-bar-time">3:18 pm</span></div>
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<h1 class="story-h">NDP forces debate on murdered and missing aboriginal women</h1>
<div class="story-byline"><span class="story-author">By Staff</span>  <span class="story-via">The Canadian Press</span></div>
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<pre><a href="http://globalnews.ca/news/1572981/ndp-forces-debate-on-murdered-and-missing-aboriginal-women/" target="_blank">http://globalnews.ca/news/1572981/ndp-forces-debate-on-murdered-and-missing-aboriginal-women/</a></pre>
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<p><span class="Apple-style-span"><span class="story-img-link" data-displayinline-type="video" data-displayinline-ratio="16:9+60" data-displayinline="http://globalnews.ca/video/embed/1573308/#autoplay" data-displayinline-init="true"><span class="story-img-link-wrapper"><img class="story-img" alt="" src="http://i2.wp.com/media.globalnews.ca/videostatic/564/647/ndpGNEWS19092014_tnb_2.jpg?w=670" width="640" height="360" /></span></span></span></p>
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<p><strong>ABOVE: NDP Peter Julian discusses the parliamentary maneuver they used to force a debate on murdered and missing aboriginal women </strong></p>
<p>OTTAWA – The NDP has used a tactical ploy to force a debate in the House of Commons about the need for an inquiry into murdered and missing aboriginal women.</p>
<p>The Opposition caught Conservatives by surprise, waiting until they had filed out of the House after the daily question period.</p>
<p>The NDP then rushed their own members back in and out-voted the remaining Tories to approve the debate.</p>
<p><strong>READ MORE: <a href="http://globalnews.ca/news/1525745/sask-premier-backs-public-inquiry-on-missing-murdered-aboriginal-women/">Wall backs public inquiry on missing, murdered aboriginal women</a></strong></p>
<p>Romeo Saganash, an NDP member from northern Quebec region, has told the House that aboriginal women are much more likely to be victims of violence than non-native women.</p>
<p>Saganash says an inquiry is needed to get to root causes.</p>
<p>Conservative Susan Truppe defended the government’s record on murdered and missing aboriginal women.</p>
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		<title>Forensic Audit Shows Former Lubicon &#8220;Chief&#8221; Collected $1.5 Million While Community Went Without Running Water</title>
		<link>https://sttpml.org/canada/forensic-audit-shows-former-lubicon-chief-collected-1-5-million-while-community-went-without-running-water/</link>
		<comments>https://sttpml.org/canada/forensic-audit-shows-former-lubicon-chief-collected-1-5-million-while-community-went-without-running-water/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Sep 2014 06:17:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[jimcraven]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CANADIAN GOVERNMENT POLICY]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[COLONIALISM]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Corrupt Tribal Councils and Genocide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CORRUPTION]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GENOCIDE]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Indigenous Activists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Masks of Genocide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[OPPOSE CORRUPTION]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PSYCHOPATHY AND SOCIOPATHY]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[REAL HISTORY EXPOSED]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[STATE SPONSORED TERRORISM]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WHISTLE-BLOWERS]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Lubicon Lake Band September 09, 2014 10:02 ET Forensic Audit Shows Former Lubicon Chief Collected $1.5 Million While Community Went Without Running Water Former leadership spent more than $27.5 million dollars over a six-year period with little sign of benefits &#8230; <a href="https://sttpml.org/canada/forensic-audit-shows-former-lubicon-chief-collected-1-5-million-while-community-went-without-running-water/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://www.lubiconlakeband.ca/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"><img alt="Lubicon Lake Band" src="http://media3.marketwire.com/logos/20140905-LLB%20logo%20from%20Publisher%20200.jpg" /></a></td>
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<p id="news-date">September 09, 2014 10:02 ET</p>
<h1>Forensic Audit Shows Former Lubicon Chief Collected $1.5 Million While Community Went Without Running Water</h1>
<p><strong>Former leadership spent more than $27.5 million dollars over a six-year period with little sign of benefits or investment in the Lubicon Cree community of Little Buffalo.</strong></p>
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<p><strong>LITTLE BUFFALO, ALBERTA&#8211;(Marketwired &#8211; Sept. 9, 2014) -</strong> The Lubicon Lake Band Chief and Council are reacting to the results of an MNP LLP forensic audit into the Cree Development Corporation covering the period of March 1, 2006 to February 28, 2012.</p>
<p>The corporation, which was meant to provide economic development for the Lubicon Cree community, was controlled by former Chief Bernard Ominayak and his immediate family and supporters. In a period of just four years, Ominayak and his family paid themselves more than $3.3 million.</p>
<p>&#8220;For many years our community has suffered without basic necessities like running water, while a small number of people got rich,&#8221; said Billy Joe Laboucan, the recently elected Chief of the Lubicon Lake Band. &#8220;Dictatorship rule has cost our community tens of millions of dollars and countless opportunities. This is a wake-up call that never again should we allow ourselves to be governed in this way.&#8221;</p>
<p>The audit shows large sums being paid, including almost $1.5 million spent on financial and credit card payments and nearly $1.2 million on automotive costs. Community members say they do not have access to the cards or vehicles.</p>
<p>An open letter (<a href="http://ow.ly/BhcDW" rel="nofollow">http://ow.ly/BhcDW</a>) has begun circulating in the community, calling on the former leaders to account for their expenditures and asking the current Chief and Council to hold restorative justice circles in the community.</p>
<p>&#8220;We may never know the full extent of what we have lost as a community financially, but we know what we have lost in trust,&#8221; said Chief Laboucan. &#8220;We are hopeful that this will never happen again because our members have seen the truth, they have a voice and they are able to make fully informed decisions. It will take all of us working together to heal and rebuild our community.&#8221;</p>
<p>The results of the forensic audit can be downloaded here: <a href="http://ow.ly/Bhf3X" rel="nofollow">http://ow.ly/Bhf3X</a></p>
<p>The open letter can be read here: <a href="http://ow.ly/BhcDW" rel="nofollow">http://ow.ly/BhcDW</a></p>
<div><a href=" http://www.marketwired.com/press-release/forensic-audit-shows-former-lubicon-chief-collected-15-million-while-community-went-1945409.htm#.VBB-68Mnozg.email"> http://www.marketwired.com/press-release/forensic-audit-shows-former-lubicon-chief-collected-15-million-while-community-went-1945409.htm#.VBB-68Mnozg.email</a></div>
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<h1>CONTACT INFORMATION</h1>
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<div>Lubicon Lake Band<br />
Andrew Frank<br />
Communications Specialist<br />
604-367-2112<br />
<a href="http://www.lubiconlakeband.ca/" target="_blank">www.lubiconlakeband.ca</a></div>
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		<title>Wikileaks: Decades-Long Proof of Government, Corporate Surveillance of &#8216;Native Americans&#8217; Revealed</title>
		<link>https://sttpml.org/canada/wikileaks-decades-long-proof-of-government-corporate-surveillance-of-native-americans-revealed/</link>
		<comments>https://sttpml.org/canada/wikileaks-decades-long-proof-of-government-corporate-surveillance-of-native-americans-revealed/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2014 18:46:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[jimcraven]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CANADIAN GOVERNMENT POLICY]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[COLONIALISM]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Corrupt Tribal Councils and Genocide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CORRUPTION]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[FALSE FLAG OPS]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GENOCIDE]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Indigenous Activists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MAINSTREAM MEDIA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Masks of Genocide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[OPPOSE CORRUPTION]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[REAL HISTORY EXPOSED]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[STATE SPONSORED TERRORISM]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[STRATFOR EMAILS]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[WIKILEAKS]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[WikiLeaks: Decades Long Proof Of Government, Corporate Surveillance Of Native Americans Revealed WikiLeaks proves what Native Americans have suspected for years. By Christine Graef &#124; August 9, 2014 NEW YORK– It’s an ordinary day at Akwesasne: drones fly high overhead; Border Patrol’s presence &#8230; <a href="https://sttpml.org/canada/wikileaks-decades-long-proof-of-government-corporate-surveillance-of-native-americans-revealed/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
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<h1 style="font-weight: 400;">WikiLeaks: Decades Long Proof Of Government, Corporate Surveillance Of Native Americans Revealed</h1>
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<div class="lsingle_excerpt font-6" style="font-weight: bold;">WikiLeaks proves what Native Americans have suspected for years.</div>
<div class="lsingle_author font-6" style="font-style: italic;"><b>By <a style="color: #000000;" title="Posts by Christine Graef" href="http://www.mintpressnews.com/author/chris-graef/" rel="author">Christine Graef</a></b> | <span class="entry-date" style="color: #000000;"><a style="color: #000000;" title="5:00 am" href="http://www.mintpressnews.com/wikileaks-reveals-proof-of-government-and-corporate-surveillance-of-native-americans/194952/" rel="bookmark">August 9, 2014</a></span></div>
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<p><img class="size-large wp-image-195130" alt="Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann (left), President of the sixty-third session of the General Assembly, meets with Tadodaho Sid Hill,Spiritual leader of the Haudenosaunee, (also known as the &quot;League of Peace and Power&quot;, the &quot;Five Nations&quot;; the &quot;Six Nations&quot;; or the &quot;People of the Longhouse&quot;) --  a group of First Nations/Native Americans that originally consisted of five nations: the Mohawk, the Oneida, the Onondaga, the Cayuga, and the Seneca.18/May/2009. United Nations, New York. UN Photo/Devra Berkowitz. www.unmultimedia.org/photo/" src="http://cdn.mintpressnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/sid-UN-nyc-2009-795x596.jpg?df0245" width="795" height="596" /></p>
<p>NEW YORK– It’s an ordinary day at Akwesasne: drones fly high overhead; Border Patrol’s presence is palpable; and cellphones are rarely used because they may be tapped.</p>
<p>The village spans the northeastern New York-Canada border, and with listening devices, chemical detectors and X-ray equipment, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection station is among the most sophisticated in the country. As Mohawks travel back and forth through their community, going to work and visiting family on each side of the border, their cars are even weighed.</p>
<p>The people here say the government has been spying on the Mohawk Indian reservation for decades. But until recently, these concerns were mostly just suspicions.</p>
<p>WikiLeaks has released documents revealing corporate and government surveillance of the Mohawk people’s relationships with foreign countries, as well as evidence that movements that could block corporate plans for oil and gas were tracked and that Native American communities were monitored for the U.S. Department Homeland Security.<br />
<span id="more-303"></span><br />
The documents — among 5 million of WikiLeaks’ Global Intelligence Files — were released this month. Disclosures include emails from Stratfor, a Texas-based company that provides intelligence for corporations, such as Dow Chemical Co., Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, the Raytheon Company, and U.S. government agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security, the Marine Corps and the Defense Intelligence Agency.</p>
<p>An Oct. 20, 2008 email sent by a Stratfor employee to Stratfor’s Analyst List hinted that the Mohawk and Cree tribes may have been responsible for a series of pipeline bombings in Canada that month.</p>
<p>“While it’s too early to link these pipeline bombings to the Olympic protests, the attacks certainly have brought to the surface contested issues like oil &amp; gas exploration and indigenous rights. To me, it seems like there is too much in common here – any attention = good attention for protesters and, as long as they can keep a safe distance from the actual bombers, they can benefit from these attacks,” <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/gifiles/docs/51/5110382_re-discussion-pipeline-bombing-in-canada-.html" target="_blank">the email said</a>.</p>
<p>Earlier that month, on Oct. 10, a letter to local media in British Columbia warned oil and gas companies to leave. The letter’s use of the term “home lands” threw suspicion on the Mohawk and Cree people, whose territories have been barraged by industrial pollution during the past 50 years. <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/gifiles/docs/18/1857892_re-s3-canada-second-pipeline-explosion-.html" target="_blank">The letter read</a>: “We will no longer negotiate with terrorists which you are as you keep endangering our families with crazy expansion of deadly gas wells in our home lands.”</p>
<p><a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/gifiles/docs/51/5110382_re-discussion-pipeline-bombing-in-canada-.html" target="_blank">Another Oct. 20 Stratfor analyst email said</a>, “Pipelines carrying sour gas (highly toxic/flammable) were bombed twice last week in the same corner of British Columbia. The first attack did no physical damage to the pipe, while the second one did apparently cause a leak in the line. A letter sent to local media shortly before the first attack (suspected to be sent by those responsible for the two attacks) ordered local oil &amp; gas operations on their ‘home lands’ to stop immediately and indicated that negotiations were not doing enough to stop the health hazards posed by oil &amp; gas extraction.”</p>
<p>—– Original Message —–<br />
From:”Mark Schroeder” &lt;mark.schroeder@stratfor.com&gt;<br />
To: “Analyst List” &lt;analysts@stratfor.com&gt;<br />
Sent: Monday, October 20, 2008 7:25:17 PM GMT +02:00 Harare / Pretoria<br />
Subject: Re: DISCUSSION: Pipeline bombing in Canada</p>
<p>The Canadians didn’t use the army, but used the police do round up the<br />
tribes and massacres occurred. Back then the police force was called the<br />
North-West Mounted Police, which later became the Royal Canadian Mounted<br />
Police (RCMP). The NWMP worked primarily in the prairie provinces<br />
(Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta).</p>
<p>—– Original Message —–<br />
From: “Fred Burton” &lt;burton@stratfor.com&gt;<br />
To: “Analyst List” &lt;analysts@stratfor.com&gt;<br />
Sent: Monday, October 20, 2008 7:16:47 PM GMT +02:00 Harare / Pretoria<br />
Subject: RE: DISCUSSION: Pipeline bombing in Canada</p>
<p>Yes, very much so.</p>
<p>From a historic perspective, did the Canadian army ever carry out<br />
massacres of the tribes?</p>
<p>The Mohawks in upstate NY were also engaged in violence.</p>
<p>From: analysts-bounces@stratfor.com [mailto:analysts-bounces@stratfor.com]<br />
On Behalf Of Mark Schroeder<br />
Sent: Monday, October 20, 2008 11:49 AM<br />
To: Analyst List<br />
Subject: Re: DISCUSSION: Pipeline bombing in Canada</p>
<p>There are some militant Indians in Canada across the provinces. Could be<br />
good to add that in — the Oka in Quebec (had to send in the army to deal<br />
with them), some band around Ipperwash, Ontario (sent in an OPP Swat team<br />
to deal with them), another band in Manitoba that once in a while<br />
blockading the Trans Canada Highway (I think regular RCMP dealt with<br />
them), and now the Cree in BC.</p>
<p>Haven’t seen them come into the cities or built-up areas to target folks<br />
like oil execs, but barricading themselves or taking over rural sites is<br />
more common (though doesn’t occur frequently).</p>
<p>The Oka incident mentioned in the email was a violent conflict between First Nations and the Canadian government that began on July 11,1990 and ended Sept. 26, 1990. Marcel Lemay, a corporal with Quebec’s provincial police force, died from a shotgun wound that struck his left side, which his bulletproof vest didn’t cover.</p>
<p>Commonly known as the Oka Crisis, the incident began after the Mohawk of the Kanesatake reserve filed a land claim for a nearby traditional burial ground. This claim was rejected in 1986, and <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="http://www.therecord.com/sports-story/2568622-the-legacy-of-the-oka-crisis-20-years-later-the-status-quo/" target="_blank">even 20 years after the Oka Crisis, the land was part of a dispute</a> between Mohawks, the government and developers. In 1989, Jean Ouellette — then-mayor of the town of Oka, located west of Montréal — announced that the land would be cleared to expand a private, members-only golf course and make way for 60 luxury condominiums. No environmental or historic preservation review was carried out.</p>
<p>Members of the Mohawk community blocked access to the land with a barricade, which started with about a dozen people and eventually numbered into the hundreds.</p>
<p>“These people have seen their lands disappear without having been consulted or compensated and that, in my opinion, is unfair and unjust, especially over a golf course,” John Ciaccia, Quebec’s then-Minister of Native Affairs, wrote in response to the mayor’s demand that the protesters be removed.</p>
<p>In the months prior to the incident, Ciaccia had pushed for Ottawa to approve an agreement that would allow the Canadian federal government to acquire the territory in dispute and give it to the Kanesatake Mohawk.</p>
<p>Mayor Ouellette called in Quebec’s provincial police force in response to the barricade. The Mohawk, in turn, followed their Constitution of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy and the women — considered the caretakers of the land and progenitors of the nation — told the protestors that no weapons should be used — unless police fired on them and they fired back in defense.</p>
<p><img class="wp-image-195132" alt="Oren Lyons, (third from left), Faithkeeper of the Turtle Clan of the Onondaga Nation, and member of Grand Council of Chiefs of the Haudenosaunee, addresses a panel discussion on the reconciliation between the indigenous peoples and the states, as part of the activities in observance of the International Day of the World's Indigenous People. Other panellists seated with him at the podium (from left to right): Marcie Mersky, Liaison Officer with the United Nations Department of Political Affairs; Andrew Goledzinowski, Deputy Permanent Representative of Australia to the United Nations; Barbara James Snyder, of the Washoe &amp; Paiute Nations; Gert Rosenthal, Permanent Representative of Guatemala to the United Nations; and Henri Paul Normandin, Deputy Permanent Representative of Canada to the United Nations on August 8, 2008 (Photo/United Nations). " src="http://cdn.mintpressnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/UN-oren-1.jpg?df0245" width="546" height="364" /></p>
<p>The police mobilized and tossed tear gas canisters and flash bang grenades at the protesters. The Kanesatake Mohawk were soon joined at the barricade by First Nations peoples from across Canada and Native Americans from the United States. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police were eventually brought in and 2,500 Canadian armed troops were placed on standby. Reconnaissance aircraft circled above, and 800 members of the Royal 22 took over for the police. After 78 days, the protestors surrendered to the army.</p>
<p>“Could we see them targeting oil execs in Canada?” Stratfor’s Fred Burton wrote in an Oct. 20, 2008 email.</p>
<p>—–Original Message—–<br />
From: analysts-bounces@stratfor.com [mailto:analysts-bounces@stratfor.com]<br />
On Behalf Of Ben West<br />
Sent: Monday, October 20, 2008 11:15 AM<br />
To: Analyst List<br />
Subject: DISCUSSION: Pipeline bombing in Canada</p>
<p>Bombing a critical infrastructure in Canada is not unheard of – a similar<br />
series of bombings occurred in Alberta in the 1990s – but whereas earlier<br />
bombings seemed to be the work of one individual, these most recent<br />
attacks could be part of a much bigger movement.</p>
<p>Many other groups, including environmentalists, indigenous rights<br />
advocates and First Nation tribes themselves (which consist of about 2 million<br />
people- 5% of Canada’s population) have been turning up the volume in recent<br />
months, bundling up issues like the environment, oil &amp; gas exploration,<br />
indigenous rights and anti-capitalism. Their complaints are aimed at the<br />
oil and gas industries and the government – the same entities that last<br />
week’s letter appeared to go after. So far, none of the protests have been<br />
attacked, but they have specifically targeted the 2010 olympics as a<br />
platform to get their point across.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h2 style="font-weight: 400;"><b>Russell Means and the CIA’s Operation Chaos</b></h2>
<p>The Mohawk, part of the Six Nations of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy in upstate</p>
<p>New York, sent a request to Washington during the American Indian</p>
<p>Movement occupation in South Dakota in 1973. The Haudenosaunee — also known as the Iroquois — were asked to serve as peace mediators. The recent WikiLeaks revelations included <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="http://www.wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/1973USUNN01700_b.html" target="_blank">a cable to the government, signed by Onondaga and Mohawk leaders</a>, reading: “We also request the removal of censorship and free information on the facts in Wounded Knee and not the government side of the issues presented and the Indian side completely suppressed.”</p>
<p>The town of Wounded Knee on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, the site of an 1890 massacre, was taken over by about 200 Lakota and American Indian Movement followers on Feb. 27, 1973 in protest of a failed attempt to impeach tribal president Richard Wilson, who had been accused of corruption.</p>
<p>The occupation lasted 71 days and U.S. Marshals, FBI agents and law enforcement surrounded the area. As gunshots rang out back and forth, a U.S. Marshal was left paralyzed and a Cherokee man and a Lakota man were killed. Ray Robinson, a father of three and black civil rights activist from Alabama, disappeared. Forty years later, the FBI determined that he had been murdered in the camp.</p>
<p>“Robinson had been tortured and murdered within the AIM occupation perimeter and then his remains were buried ‘in the hills,’” an unidentified cooperating witness told FBI agents, according to FBI documents.</p>
<p>Concerns that spies were infiltrating the occupation ran high. Annie Mae Pictou Aquash, a member of the Mi’kmaq from Nova Scotia, joined the American Indian Movement at Pine Ridge to support Native American rights.</p>
<p>A local rancher found Aquash’s body by the side of State Road 73 at the northeast of the reservation on Feb. 24, 1976.</p>
<p>During an initial autopsy, local medical examiner W. O. Brown estimated that Aquash had been dead for about 10 days and concluded that she had died from exposure. It was later determined that the 30-year-old mother of two young daughters had, in fact, died from a bullet to her skull.</p>
<p>It wasn’t until 2003 that American Indian Movement members Arlo Looking Cloud, Theda Nelson Clark and John Graham were indicted and convicted of murdering Aquash, per the orders of American Indian Movement leader Vernon Bellecourt, who suspected that the woman was an informant.</p>
<p>Paul DeMain, an Ojibwe owner and publisher of the independent newspaper News From Indian Country, began investigating Aquash’s murder in the 1990s. After finding proof of the paranoia building up within the American Indian Movement, as well as proof that Aquash was not an informant but a gifted language teacher, DeMain began receiving threats and was accused of working for the FBI.</p>
<p>In 1967, President Lyndon B. Johnson authorized the CIA’s Operation Chaos to gather</p>
<p>documents on 7,200 citizens, including members of the American Indian Movement and the Black Panthers, among members of other student and anti-war movements.</p>
<p>The CIA monitored <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/1977STATE226024_c.html" target="_blank">Russell Means</a>, a Lakota member of the American Indian Movement, after <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/1977STATE237305_c.html%20" target="_blank">he stated he would expose the genocide of American Indians</a> to Europe and seek European support.</p>
<blockquote style="font-style: italic;"><p>2. RUSSELL MEANS OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN MOVEMENT (AIM), WHO HAS PRESENCE, A SENSE OF THE DRAMATIC AND RATHER EXCESSIVE RHETORIC, WAS MOST COMPELLING SPEAKER DURING MORNING MEETING. MEANS PREFACED REMARKS BY SAYING THAT THE INDIAN NATION WAS QUOTE: LIVING IN THE BELLY OF A MONSTER; THE MONSTER WAS THE UNITED STATES-UNQUOTE. HE ACCUSED OTHER WESTERN HEMISPHERE COUNTRIES OF FOLLOWING U.S. TACTICS (WHICH LEAD TO DEPRIVATIONS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLE). HE CAUTIONED INDIANS NOT TO TURN THE OTHER CHEEK AS THEY HAD BEEN DOING FOR 500 YEARS.</p>
<p>3. MEANS WENT ON TO CALL PRESIDENT CARTER THE GREATEST RACIST IN THE WORLD</p></blockquote>
<p>Means joined the American Indian Movement in 1968 and was appointed the organization’s first national director in 1970. He participated in the November 1972 occupation of the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington, D.C., during which the American Indian Movement protested the abuse of the human rights of Native Americans. Means became well known as the spokesperson during the occupation of Wounded Knee in 1973. In later years, he was active in international issues of indigenous people and worked with the United Nations to establish the International Treaty Council in 1977.</p>
<h2 style="font-weight: 400;"><b>Haudenosaunee sovereignty</b></h2>
<p>In 1977, the CIA was also concerned about the Haudenosaunee delegation traveling to Europe to discuss issues of injustice and using their own passports as sovereign nations — not U.S. passports, <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/1977STATE226024_c.html" target="_blank">according to the spy cable</a>.</p>
<p>The Haudenosaunee — today numbering about 70,000 — have never surrendered their rights as a people. Within the boundaries of New York state, they currently hold 39,000 square miles of their original land, representing .034 percent of their original homeland.  It is here that all their ancestors have lived and died. It is here that the stories of the Earth’s creation and the epics of their history continue to be told. It is here that their children are born.</p>
<p>From 1821 to 1842 there were attempts to remove the Haudenosaunee to Wisconsin and Kansas. In 1851, there was an attempt to evict the Seneca people from their lands at Tonawanda. In 1886, the Dawes Act tried to divide the Haudenosaunee lands. In 1924, they rejected the U.S. passage of a Citizenship Act, an attempt to make Native Americans U.S. citizens.</p>
<p>“We’ve been systematically stripped of resources and yet we’ve survived,” Oren Lyons, Faithkeeper for the Onondaga Nation, explained to this writer in 2006. Lyons was a member of the delegation that traveled to Europe in 1977. “Can we sustain another 500 years of this? I don’t think so.”</p>
<p>During the activism of the 1970s, Augusto Williamson Diaz, a man from Guatemala, had a vision which he brought to the Haudenosaunee in 1974. He said that as America neared its 500th year, its indigenous people should be in the hall of the U.N.</p>
<p>“We could not find justice here,” said Lyons, “so we moved into the international field.”</p>
<p>In 1977, Lyons organized with 145 Native North and South American leaders to address the U.N. about their concerns for indigenous people. The Haudenosaunee succeeded in gaining recognition as a non-governmental organization in the U.N.</p>
<p>After arriving in Switzerland, the mayor of Geneva invited the Haudenosaunee and their friends to a meeting, which they attended in full dress, seated at tables laid with elegant crystal and silver.</p>
<p>“As we approached, the mayor stepped forward, the first words he asked ‘Is Deskaheh here?’” said Lyons. “Deskaheh (Harvey Longboat) couldn’t make it. The mayor told how Deskaheh came in 1923, bringing charges against Canada for taking over Six Nations by force. He was blocked by Great Britain and couldn’t get to the council.”</p>
<p>Later, a meeting was organized for Deskaheh to speak to the public. He was tired, carrying a bag of papers, the evidence he presented as he relayed his story. On his way out, a little boy stopped him to say hello. Deskaheh put down his bag and shook the boy’s hand.</p>
<p>That little boy would grow up to be the mayor of Geneva.</p>
<p>While 145 people attended the first visit to the U.N., that number has multiplied to over 1,300 today. By 1982, their efforts had spawned the U.N’s Working Group on Indigenous Populations that resulted in a draft Declaration of Rights of Indigenous Populations.</p>
<p>The 12-page U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People affirms the rights to self-governance and to assert their distinct political, legal, economic, social and cultural heritage.</p>
<p>Article 19 of the declaration states: “States shall consult and cooperate in good faith with the Indigenous peoples concerned through their own representative institutions in order to obtain their free, prior and informed consent before adopting and implementing legislative and administrative measures that may affect them.”</p>
<p>“We had to battle through 11 years to get it to be a declaration,” Lyons said.</p>
<p><a style="color: #0066cc;" href="about:blank">The U.N. adopted the declaration</a> on Sept. 13, 2007 by a vote of 144-4. The U.S., Canada, Australia and New Zealand — four countries with origins as European colonies — voted against it, but they have all informally endorsed the declaration since.</p>
<p>WikiLeaks revealed U.S. concern that Bolivia and Mexico would attend the American Indian Movement’s Indian Treaty Convention, planned to be held in South Dakota in 1974. “The USG [U.S. government] would regard official participation in this event by any foreign government as inappropriate,” <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/1974STATE101850_b.html" target="_blank">according to an unclassified cable from 1974</a>.</p>
<p>In January 1974, the U.S. State Department paid close attention when Soviet journalists  planned to travel to Minneapolis for the trial of those who occupied Wounded Knee. The State Department tracked news coverage of Indian and human rights.</p>
<p><a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/1974STATE012511_b.html" target="_blank">The following cable was sent from the State Department to Russia</a>:</p>
<p>BELIEVE VISITS MAY BE IN CONNECTION WITH RECENTLY BEGUN TRIALS OF PERSONS ARRESTED AT WOUNDED KNEE, S. DAKOTA, DURING TAKEOVER OF THAT TOWN. REQUEST EMBASSY BE ALERT TO SUCH REPORTAGE, PARTICULARLY ON SOVIET TV, WHICH NOT COVERED BY FBIS.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h2 style="font-weight: 400;"><b>“Women are the first environment”</b></h2>
<p><a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/1977GENEVA08202_c.html" target="_blank">The U.S.’s statement to the 1977 Conference On Discrimination Against Indigenous Populations</a>acknowledges that the U.S. government sterilized thousands of Native American women without their consent. But, it said, “the U.S. categorically rejects the charges of genocide which is defined in Article II of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the crime of genocide as ‘Acts Committed with the Intent to Destroy’ a group.”</p>
<p>On Nov. 9, 1972 a delegation of about 500 American Indians with the American Indian Movement traveled to Washington, D.C., as part of their participation in a Trail of Broken Treaties event to bring attention to the sub-standard living conditions and broken treaties affecting Native Americans throughout the country.</p>
<p>Arriving at the Bureau of Indian Affairs expecting a meeting, the group instead found themselves being pushed aside. They took over the building in protest. The event gained national attention, as they forbid any police or government representative to approach the building. The protesters stayed for a week, leaving thousands of dollars in damage and contributing to the loss and destruction of many irreplaceable records.</p>
<p>Among the protesters at the BIA was <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="http://indianyouth.org/katsi" target="_blank">Sherrill Elizabeth Tekatsitsiakwa Cook, also known as Katsi</a>, a Mohawk from Akwesasne.</p>
<p>Of all the issues that affect Native American communities — such as water or fishing rights, treaties and tribal terminations, Cook says everything boils down to whether Native American women have the right to birth and raise their children according to their traditions.</p>
<p>Cook had been part of the Women of the Red Power movement of the 1970s that grew into WARN, or Women of All Red Nations, after a meeting of women from more than 20 Indigenous nations met in Rapid City, South Dakota, to discuss health issues. They publicized the discovery of the BIA documents of government sterilizations on an estimated 70,000 Native American women throughout the 1970s. The procedures were performed by the Indian Health Service without the women’s consent, despite language barriers and under threats that they would lose their welfare benefits if they birthed another child. In some cases, teenage girls went in to have their tonsils removed and left without their ovaries.</p>
<p>“Women are the first environment,” said Cook, who is now a midwife and executive director of First Environment Collaborative, a Running Strong for American Indian Youth program. “We are an embodiment of our Mother Earth. From the bodies of women flows the relationship of the generations both to society and the natural world. With our bodies we nourish, sustain and create connected relationships and interdependence. In this way the Earth is our mother, our ancestors said. In this way, we as women are Earth.”</p>
<hr />
<p><em style="font-style: italic;">See the full Stratfor email here</em></p>
<div class="lsingle_header font-5" style="font-weight: 400; color: #000000;">
<h1 style="font-weight: 400;">WikiLeaks: Decades Long Proof Of Government, Corporate Surveillance Of Native Americans Revealed</h1>
</div>
<div class="lsingle_excerpt font-6" style="font-weight: bold;">WikiLeaks proves what Native Americans have suspected for years.</div>
<div class="lsingle_author font-6" style="font-style: italic;"><b>By <a style="color: #000000;" title="Posts by Christine Graef" href="http://www.mintpressnews.com/author/chris-graef/" rel="author">Christine Graef</a></b> | <a style="color: #000000;" title="5:00 am" href="http://www.mintpressnews.com/wikileaks-reveals-proof-of-government-and-corporate-surveillance-of-native-americans/194952/" rel="bookmark"><span class="entry-date">August 9, 2014</span></a></div>
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<p><img class="size-large wp-image-195130" alt="Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann (left), President of the sixty-third session of the General Assembly, meets with Tadodaho Sid Hill,Spiritual leader of the Haudenosaunee, (also known as the &quot;League of Peace and Power&quot;, the &quot;Five Nations&quot;; the &quot;Six Nations&quot;; or the &quot;People of the Longhouse&quot;) --  a group of First Nations/Native Americans that originally consisted of five nations: the Mohawk, the Oneida, the Onondaga, the Cayuga, and the Seneca.18/May/2009. United Nations, New York. UN Photo/Devra Berkowitz. www.unmultimedia.org/photo/" src="http://cdn.mintpressnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/sid-UN-nyc-2009-795x596.jpg?df0245" width="795" height="596" /></p>
<p>NEW YORK– It’s an ordinary day at Akwesasne: drones fly high overhead; Border Patrol’s presence is palpable; and cellphones are rarely used because they may be tapped.</p>
<p>The village spans the northeastern New York-Canada border, and with listening devices, chemical detectors and X-ray equipment, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection station is among the most sophisticated in the country. As Mohawks travel back and forth through their community, going to work and visiting family on each side of the border, their cars are even weighed.</p>
<p>The people here say the government has been spying on the Mohawk Indian reservation for decades. But until recently, these concerns were mostly just suspicions.</p>
<p>WikiLeaks has released documents revealing corporate and government surveillance of the Mohawk people’s relationships with foreign countries, as well as evidence that movements that could block corporate plans for oil and gas were tracked and that Native American communities were monitored for the U.S. Department Homeland Security.</p>
<p>The documents — among 5 million of WikiLeaks’ Global Intelligence Files — were released this month. Disclosures include emails from Stratfor, a Texas-based company that provides intelligence for corporations, such as Dow Chemical Co., Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, the Raytheon Company, and U.S. government agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security, the Marine Corps and the Defense Intelligence Agency.</p>
<p>An Oct. 20, 2008 email sent by a Stratfor employee to Stratfor’s Analyst List hinted that the Mohawk and Cree tribes may have been responsible for a series of pipeline bombings in Canada that month.</p>
<p>“While it’s too early to link these pipeline bombings to the Olympic protests, the attacks certainly have brought to the surface contested issues like oil &amp; gas exploration and indigenous rights. To me, it seems like there is too much in common here – any attention = good attention for protesters and, as long as they can keep a safe distance from the actual bombers, they can benefit from these attacks,” <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/gifiles/docs/51/5110382_re-discussion-pipeline-bombing-in-canada-.html" target="_blank">the email said</a>.</p>
<p>Earlier that month, on Oct. 10, a letter to local media in British Columbia warned oil and gas companies to leave. The letter’s use of the term “home lands” threw suspicion on the Mohawk and Cree people, whose territories have been barraged by industrial pollution during the past 50 years. <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/gifiles/docs/18/1857892_re-s3-canada-second-pipeline-explosion-.html" target="_blank">The letter read</a>: “We will no longer negotiate with terrorists which you are as you keep endangering our families with crazy expansion of deadly gas wells in our home lands.”</p>
<p><a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/gifiles/docs/51/5110382_re-discussion-pipeline-bombing-in-canada-.html" target="_blank">Another Oct. 20 Stratfor analyst email said</a>, “Pipelines carrying sour gas (highly toxic/flammable) were bombed twice last week in the same corner of British Columbia. The first attack did no physical damage to the pipe, while the second one did apparently cause a leak in the line. A letter sent to local media shortly before the first attack (suspected to be sent by those responsible for the two attacks) ordered local oil &amp; gas operations on their ‘home lands’ to stop immediately and indicated that negotiations were not doing enough to stop the health hazards posed by oil &amp; gas extraction.”</p>
<p>—– Original Message —–<br />
From:”Mark Schroeder” &lt;mark.schroeder@stratfor.com&gt;<br />
To: “Analyst List” &lt;analysts@stratfor.com&gt;<br />
Sent: Monday, October 20, 2008 7:25:17 PM GMT +02:00 Harare / Pretoria<br />
Subject: Re: DISCUSSION: Pipeline bombing in Canada</p>
<p>The Canadians didn’t use the army, but used the police do round up the<br />
tribes and massacres occurred. Back then the police force was called the<br />
North-West Mounted Police, which later became the Royal Canadian Mounted<br />
Police (RCMP). The NWMP worked primarily in the prairie provinces<br />
(Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta).</p>
<p>—– Original Message —–<br />
From: “Fred Burton” &lt;burton@stratfor.com&gt;<br />
To: “Analyst List” &lt;analysts@stratfor.com&gt;<br />
Sent: Monday, October 20, 2008 7:16:47 PM GMT +02:00 Harare / Pretoria<br />
Subject: RE: DISCUSSION: Pipeline bombing in Canada</p>
<p>Yes, very much so.</p>
<p>From a historic perspective, did the Canadian army ever carry out<br />
massacres of the tribes?</p>
<p>The Mohawks in upstate NY were also engaged in violence.</p>
<p>From: analysts-bounces@stratfor.com [mailto:analysts-bounces@stratfor.com]<br />
On Behalf Of Mark Schroeder<br />
Sent: Monday, October 20, 2008 11:49 AM<br />
To: Analyst List<br />
Subject: Re: DISCUSSION: Pipeline bombing in Canada</p>
<p>There are some militant Indians in Canada across the provinces. Could be<br />
good to add that in — the Oka in Quebec (had to send in the army to deal<br />
with them), some band around Ipperwash, Ontario (sent in an OPP Swat team<br />
to deal with them), another band in Manitoba that once in a while<br />
blockading the Trans Canada Highway (I think regular RCMP dealt with<br />
them), and now the Cree in BC.</p>
<p>Haven’t seen them come into the cities or built-up areas to target folks<br />
like oil execs, but barricading themselves or taking over rural sites is<br />
more common (though doesn’t occur frequently).</p>
<p>The Oka incident mentioned in the email was a violent conflict between First Nations and the Canadian government that began on July 11,1990 and ended Sept. 26, 1990. Marcel Lemay, a corporal with Quebec’s provincial police force, died from a shotgun wound that struck his left side, which his bulletproof vest didn’t cover.</p>
<p>Commonly known as the Oka Crisis, the incident began after the Mohawk of the Kanesatake reserve filed a land claim for a nearby traditional burial ground. This claim was rejected in 1986, and <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="http://www.therecord.com/sports-story/2568622-the-legacy-of-the-oka-crisis-20-years-later-the-status-quo/" target="_blank">even 20 years after the Oka Crisis, the land was part of a dispute</a> between Mohawks, the government and developers. In 1989, Jean Ouellette — then-mayor of the town of Oka, located west of Montréal — announced that the land would be cleared to expand a private, members-only golf course and make way for 60 luxury condominiums. No environmental or historic preservation review was carried out.</p>
<p>Members of the Mohawk community blocked access to the land with a barricade, which started with about a dozen people and eventually numbered into the hundreds.</p>
<p>“These people have seen their lands disappear without having been consulted or compensated and that, in my opinion, is unfair and unjust, especially over a golf course,” John Ciaccia, Quebec’s then-Minister of Native Affairs, wrote in response to the mayor’s demand that the protesters be removed.</p>
<p>In the months prior to the incident, Ciaccia had pushed for Ottawa to approve an agreement that would allow the Canadian federal government to acquire the territory in dispute and give it to the Kanesatake Mohawk.</p>
<p>Mayor Ouellette called in Quebec’s provincial police force in response to the barricade. The Mohawk, in turn, followed their Constitution of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy and the women — considered the caretakers of the land and progenitors of the nation — told the protestors that no weapons should be used — unless police fired on them and they fired back in defense.</p>
<p><img class="wp-image-195132" alt="Oren Lyons, (third from left), Faithkeeper of the Turtle Clan of the Onondaga Nation, and member of Grand Council of Chiefs of the Haudenosaunee, addresses a panel discussion on the reconciliation between the indigenous peoples and the states, as part of the activities in observance of the International Day of the World's Indigenous People. Other panellists seated with him at the podium (from left to right): Marcie Mersky, Liaison Officer with the United Nations Department of Political Affairs; Andrew Goledzinowski, Deputy Permanent Representative of Australia to the United Nations; Barbara James Snyder, of the Washoe &amp; Paiute Nations; Gert Rosenthal, Permanent Representative of Guatemala to the United Nations; and Henri Paul Normandin, Deputy Permanent Representative of Canada to the United Nations on August 8, 2008 (Photo/United Nations). " src="http://cdn.mintpressnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/UN-oren-1.jpg?df0245" width="546" height="364" /></p>
<p>The police mobilized and tossed tear gas canisters and flash bang grenades at the protesters. The Kanesatake Mohawk were soon joined at the barricade by First Nations peoples from across Canada and Native Americans from the United States. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police were eventually brought in and 2,500 Canadian armed troops were placed on standby. Reconnaissance aircraft circled above, and 800 members of the Royal 22 took over for the police. After 78 days, the protestors surrendered to the army.</p>
<p>“Could we see them targeting oil execs in Canada?” Stratfor’s Fred Burton wrote in an Oct. 20, 2008 email.</p>
<p>—–Original Message—–<br />
From: analysts-bounces@stratfor.com [mailto:analysts-bounces@stratfor.com]<br />
On Behalf Of Ben West<br />
Sent: Monday, October 20, 2008 11:15 AM<br />
To: Analyst List<br />
Subject: DISCUSSION: Pipeline bombing in Canada</p>
<p>Bombing a critical infrastructure in Canada is not unheard of – a similar<br />
series of bombings occurred in Alberta in the 1990s – but whereas earlier<br />
bombings seemed to be the work of one individual, these most recent<br />
attacks could be part of a much bigger movement.</p>
<p>Many other groups, including environmentalists, indigenous rights<br />
advocates and First Nation tribes themselves (which consist of about 2 million<br />
people- 5% of Canada’s population) have been turning up the volume in recent<br />
months, bundling up issues like the environment, oil &amp; gas exploration,<br />
indigenous rights and anti-capitalism. Their complaints are aimed at the<br />
oil and gas industries and the government – the same entities that last<br />
week’s letter appeared to go after. So far, none of the protests have been<br />
attacked, but they have specifically targeted the 2010 olympics as a<br />
platform to get their point across.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h2 style="font-weight: 400;"><b>Russell Means and the CIA’s Operation Chaos</b></h2>
<p>The Mohawk, part of the Six Nations of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy in upstate</p>
<p>New York, sent a request to Washington during the American Indian</p>
<p>Movement occupation in South Dakota in 1973. The Haudenosaunee — also known as the Iroquois — were asked to serve as peace mediators. The recent WikiLeaks revelations included <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="http://www.wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/1973USUNN01700_b.html" target="_blank">a cable to the government, signed by Onondaga and Mohawk leaders</a>, reading: “We also request the removal of censorship and free information on the facts in Wounded Knee and not the government side of the issues presented and the Indian side completely suppressed.”</p>
<p>The town of Wounded Knee on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, the site of an 1890 massacre, was taken over by about 200 Lakota and American Indian Movement followers on Feb. 27, 1973 in protest of a failed attempt to impeach tribal president Richard Wilson, who had been accused of corruption.</p>
<p>The occupation lasted 71 days and U.S. Marshals, FBI agents and law enforcement surrounded the area. As gunshots rang out back and forth, a U.S. Marshal was left paralyzed and a Cherokee man and a Lakota man were killed. Ray Robinson, a father of three and black civil rights activist from Alabama, disappeared. Forty years later, the FBI determined that he had been murdered in the camp.</p>
<p>“Robinson had been tortured and murdered within the AIM occupation perimeter and then his remains were buried ‘in the hills,’” an unidentified cooperating witness told FBI agents, according to FBI documents.</p>
<p>Concerns that spies were infiltrating the occupation ran high. Annie Mae Pictou Aquash, a member of the Mi’kmaq from Nova Scotia, joined the American Indian Movement at Pine Ridge to support Native American rights.</p>
<p>A local rancher found Aquash’s body by the side of State Road 73 at the northeast of the reservation on Feb. 24, 1976.</p>
<p>During an initial autopsy, local medical examiner W. O. Brown estimated that Aquash had been dead for about 10 days and concluded that she had died from exposure. It was later determined that the 30-year-old mother of two young daughters had, in fact, died from a bullet to her skull.</p>
<p>It wasn’t until 2003 that American Indian Movement members Arlo Looking Cloud, Theda Nelson Clark and John Graham were indicted and convicted of murdering Aquash, per the orders of American Indian Movement leader Vernon Bellecourt, who suspected that the woman was an informant.</p>
<p>Paul DeMain, an Ojibwe owner and publisher of the independent newspaper News From Indian Country, began investigating Aquash’s murder in the 1990s. After finding proof of the paranoia building up within the American Indian Movement, as well as proof that Aquash was not an informant but a gifted language teacher, DeMain began receiving threats and was accused of working for the FBI.</p>
<p>In 1967, President Lyndon B. Johnson authorized the CIA’s Operation Chaos to gather</p>
<p>documents on 7,200 citizens, including members of the American Indian Movement and the Black Panthers, among members of other student and anti-war movements.</p>
<p>The CIA monitored <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/1977STATE226024_c.html" target="_blank">Russell Means</a>, a Lakota member of the American Indian Movement, after <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/1977STATE237305_c.html%20" target="_blank">he stated he would expose the genocide of American Indians</a> to Europe and seek European support.</p>
<blockquote style="font-style: italic;"><p>2. RUSSELL MEANS OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN MOVEMENT (AIM), WHO HAS PRESENCE, A SENSE OF THE DRAMATIC AND RATHER EXCESSIVE RHETORIC, WAS MOST COMPELLING SPEAKER DURING MORNING MEETING. MEANS PREFACED REMARKS BY SAYING THAT THE INDIAN NATION WAS QUOTE: LIVING IN THE BELLY OF A MONSTER; THE MONSTER WAS THE UNITED STATES-UNQUOTE. HE ACCUSED OTHER WESTERN HEMISPHERE COUNTRIES OF FOLLOWING U.S. TACTICS (WHICH LEAD TO DEPRIVATIONS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLE). HE CAUTIONED INDIANS NOT TO TURN THE OTHER CHEEK AS THEY HAD BEEN DOING FOR 500 YEARS.</p>
<p>3. MEANS WENT ON TO CALL PRESIDENT CARTER THE GREATEST RACIST IN THE WORLD</p></blockquote>
<p>Means joined the American Indian Movement in 1968 and was appointed the organization’s first national director in 1970. He participated in the November 1972 occupation of the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington, D.C., during which the American Indian Movement protested the abuse of the human rights of Native Americans. Means became well known as the spokesperson during the occupation of Wounded Knee in 1973. In later years, he was active in international issues of indigenous people and worked with the United Nations to establish the International Treaty Council in 1977.</p>
<h2 style="font-weight: 400;"><b>Haudenosaunee sovereignty</b></h2>
<p>In 1977, the CIA was also concerned about the Haudenosaunee delegation traveling to Europe to discuss issues of injustice and using their own passports as sovereign nations — not U.S. passports, <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/1977STATE226024_c.html" target="_blank">according to the spy cable</a>.</p>
<p>The Haudenosaunee — today numbering about 70,000 — have never surrendered their rights as a people. Within the boundaries of New York state, they currently hold 39,000 square miles of their original land, representing .034 percent of their original homeland.  It is here that all their ancestors have lived and died. It is here that the stories of the Earth’s creation and the epics of their history continue to be told. It is here that their children are born.</p>
<p>From 1821 to 1842 there were attempts to remove the Haudenosaunee to Wisconsin and Kansas. In 1851, there was an attempt to evict the Seneca people from their lands at Tonawanda. In 1886, the Dawes Act tried to divide the Haudenosaunee lands. In 1924, they rejected the U.S. passage of a Citizenship Act, an attempt to make Native Americans U.S. citizens.</p>
<p>“We’ve been systematically stripped of resources and yet we’ve survived,” Oren Lyons, Faithkeeper for the Onondaga Nation, explained to this writer in 2006. Lyons was a member of the delegation that traveled to Europe in 1977. “Can we sustain another 500 years of this? I don’t think so.”</p>
<p>During the activism of the 1970s, Augusto Williamson Diaz, a man from Guatemala, had a vision which he brought to the Haudenosaunee in 1974. He said that as America neared its 500th year, its indigenous people should be in the hall of the U.N.</p>
<p>“We could not find justice here,” said Lyons, “so we moved into the international field.”</p>
<p>In 1977, Lyons organized with 145 Native North and South American leaders to address the U.N. about their concerns for indigenous people. The Haudenosaunee succeeded in gaining recognition as a non-governmental organization in the U.N.</p>
<p>After arriving in Switzerland, the mayor of Geneva invited the Haudenosaunee and their friends to a meeting, which they attended in full dress, seated at tables laid with elegant crystal and silver.</p>
<p>“As we approached, the mayor stepped forward, the first words he asked ‘Is Deskaheh here?’” said Lyons. “Deskaheh (Harvey Longboat) couldn’t make it. The mayor told how Deskaheh came in 1923, bringing charges against Canada for taking over Six Nations by force. He was blocked by Great Britain and couldn’t get to the council.”</p>
<p>Later, a meeting was organized for Deskaheh to speak to the public. He was tired, carrying a bag of papers, the evidence he presented as he relayed his story. On his way out, a little boy stopped him to say hello. Deskaheh put down his bag and shook the boy’s hand.</p>
<p>That little boy would grow up to be the mayor of Geneva.</p>
<p>While 145 people attended the first visit to the U.N., that number has multiplied to over 1,300 today. By 1982, their efforts had spawned the U.N’s Working Group on Indigenous Populations that resulted in a draft Declaration of Rights of Indigenous Populations.</p>
<p>The 12-page U.N. Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People affirms the rights to self-governance and to assert their distinct political, legal, economic, social and cultural heritage.</p>
<p>Article 19 of the declaration states: “States shall consult and cooperate in good faith with the Indigenous peoples concerned through their own representative institutions in order to obtain their free, prior and informed consent before adopting and implementing legislative and administrative measures that may affect them.”</p>
<p>“We had to battle through 11 years to get it to be a declaration,” Lyons said.</p>
<p><a style="color: #0066cc;" href="about:blank">The U.N. adopted the declaration</a> on Sept. 13, 2007 by a vote of 144-4. The U.S., Canada, Australia and New Zealand — four countries with origins as European colonies — voted against it, but they have all informally endorsed the declaration since.</p>
<p>WikiLeaks revealed U.S. concern that Bolivia and Mexico would attend the American Indian Movement’s Indian Treaty Convention, planned to be held in South Dakota in 1974. “The USG [U.S. government] would regard official participation in this event by any foreign government as inappropriate,” <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/1974STATE101850_b.html" target="_blank">according to an unclassified cable from 1974</a>.</p>
<p>In January 1974, the U.S. State Department paid close attention when Soviet journalists  planned to travel to Minneapolis for the trial of those who occupied Wounded Knee. The State Department tracked news coverage of Indian and human rights.</p>
<p><a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/1974STATE012511_b.html" target="_blank">The following cable was sent from the State Department to Russia</a>:</p>
<p>BELIEVE VISITS MAY BE IN CONNECTION WITH RECENTLY BEGUN TRIALS OF PERSONS ARRESTED AT WOUNDED KNEE, S. DAKOTA, DURING TAKEOVER OF THAT TOWN. REQUEST EMBASSY BE ALERT TO SUCH REPORTAGE, PARTICULARLY ON SOVIET TV, WHICH NOT COVERED BY FBIS.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h2 style="font-weight: 400;"><b>“Women are the first environment”</b></h2>
<p><a style="color: #0066cc;" href="https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/1977GENEVA08202_c.html" target="_blank">The U.S.’s statement to the 1977 Conference On Discrimination Against Indigenous Populations</a>acknowledges that the U.S. government sterilized thousands of Native American women without their consent. But, it said, “the U.S. categorically rejects the charges of genocide which is defined in Article II of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the crime of genocide as ‘Acts Committed with the Intent to Destroy’ a group.”</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>On Nov. 9, 1972 a delegation of about 500 American Indians with the American Indian Movement traveled to Washington, D.C., as part of their participation in a Trail of Broken Treaties event to bring attention to the sub-standard living conditions and broken treaties affecting Native Americans throughout the country.</p>
<p>Arriving at the Bureau of Indian Affairs expecting a meeting, the group instead found themselves being pushed aside. They took over the building in protest. The event gained national attention, as they forbid any police or government representative to approach the building. The protesters stayed for a week, leaving thousands of dollars in damage and contributing to the loss and destruction of many irreplaceable records.</p>
<p>Among the protesters at the BIA was <a style="color: #0066cc;" href="http://indianyouth.org/katsi" target="_blank">Sherrill Elizabeth Tekatsitsiakwa Cook, also known as Katsi</a>, a Mohawk from Akwesasne.</p>
<p>Of all the issues that affect Native American communities — such as water or fishing rights, treaties and tribal terminations, Cook says everything boils down to whether Native American women have the right to birth and raise their children according to their traditions.</p>
<p>Cook had been part of the Women of the Red Power movement of the 1970s that grew into WARN, or Women of All Red Nations, after a meeting of women from more than 20 Indigenous nations met in Rapid City, South Dakota, to discuss health issues. They publicized the discovery of the BIA documents of government sterilizations on an estimated 70,000 Native American women throughout the 1970s. The procedures were performed by the Indian Health Service without the women’s consent, despite language barriers and under threats that they would lose their welfare benefits if they birthed another child. In some cases, teenage girls went in to have their tonsils removed and left without their ovaries.</p>
<p>“Women are the first environment,” said Cook, who is now a midwife and executive director of First Environment Collaborative, a Running Strong for American Indian Youth program. “We are an embodiment of our Mother Earth. From the bodies of women flows the relationship of the generations both to society and the natural world. With our bodies we nourish, sustain and create connected relationships and interdependence. In this way the Earth is our mother, our ancestors said. In this way, we as women are Earth.”</p>
<hr />
<p><em style="font-style: italic;">See the full Stratfor email here</em></p>
</div>
<p><a href="http://sttpml.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/stratfor-policyt-WikileaksPDF2.docx.pdf">stratfor policyt WikileaksPDF2.docx</a></p>
</div>
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