01)
SUPPORT MAY 29 PROTESTS!
(The
following
article is from the June 1-15, 2008, issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the
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Statement
of the Central Executive Committee and the Aboriginal Peoples'
Commission of the Communist Party of Canada
Reflecting the
rising strength of grassroots Aboriginal movements, a second annual
"National Day of Action" has been called on May 29 by the Assembly of
First Nations. The AFN's Call reflects the just demands of
Treaty-status nations on reserves. For us, the Day is a welcome
opportunity to support the AFN's Call and to raise a larger discussion
involving all Aboriginal peoples in the land called Canada, status and
non-status alike.
The NDOA
comes at a critical moment in the growing struggles by Aboriginal
peoples to defend their traditional territories and to end racism and
poverty. The Communist Party of Canada urges wide participation by the
labour and democratic movements in the NDOA and all Aboriginal
struggles. We vow to amplify our call for the genuine equality of all
nations within Canada, and for resolving the just demands of Aboriginal
peoples, including swift settlement of lands claims based on full
recognition of inherent Aboriginal title. We demand that Aboriginal
peoples be able to legally enforce an end to resource exploration and
all other development on their tradition lands pending settlement of
claims if they so choose.
Over five
hundred years after the genocidal beginning of imperialist
colonization, the indigenous peoples of the Americas are increasing
their resistance today with growing strength and unity. We salute the
historic political advances of the working class in Latin America, such
as the election of Evo Morales in Bolivia, which are based in large
part on the powerful struggles of indigenous movements against US
imperialism and its local allies.
Canada is not
isolated from this process, just as Aboriginal peoples in this country
suffer from the same oppression as in the rest of this hemisphere. The
shameful truth is that unemployment and poverty rates are far higher
for Aboriginal peoples than any other group in Canada. The suicide rate
among Aboriginal youth is estimated at nearly ten times the rate in the
wider population. Among First Nations children, 43 per cent lack basic
dental care. Over 100 Aboriginal communities have been under "boil
water" advisories for years, a situation which would not be tolerated
in other areas. Overcrowding among Aboriginal families is double the
rate of that for all Canadian families, and mould contaminates almost
half of all First Nations households. Asbestos, pesticides and mine
tailings are a particularly deadly problem for Aboriginal communities.
Decade after
decade, these appalling numbers rarely shift. But instead of taking
decisive measures to improve living conditions, the Harper government
scrapped even the Kelowna Accord's limited fiscal supports, and
rejected the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples.
Forced by
public opinion to make at least a token gesture towards equality, PM
Stephen Harper has announced plans for an "apology" for the genocidal
history of the residential schools. But more Aboriginal children are
separated from their families today than ever before, and the murders
of hundreds of Native women remain unsolved and unrecognized.
At the same
time, the Tories and their police agencies are criminalizing Aboriginal
youth, claiming for example that opposition to the 2010 Winter Olympics
in Vancouver is driven by "Native terrorists." This lie follows last
year's revelation that a Canadian Armed Forces manual lists Aboriginal
resistance movements among so-called "terrorist" groups, clearly
targets for military attack. In Ontario, the KI Six and Ardoch
Algonquin spokesperson Robert Lovelace remain in jail for the "crime"
of opposing corporate exploitation of their traditional territories.
The racist policies of the Harper Tories and provincial governments are
setting the stage for new police attacks on Aboriginal peoples, with
the tragic potential for future Ipperwashes.
Those who
refuse to accept injustice and oppression are not "terrorists" or
"criminals." The real criminals are the corporations and governments
which profit by the theft of Aboriginal lands while families live in
desperate poverty.
The truth is
that the Canadian state was founded on the theft of Aboriginal
territories. Most of the land Canada occupies was simply stolen from
Indigenous people for settler use. Wherever nation-to-nation treaties
were in fact signed, the colonizing powers soon violated these
agreements to further encroach upon Aboriginal lands. While these lands
and resources have been exploited to generate vast wealth for the
domestic and foreign transnational corporations which dominate the
Canadian economy, Aboriginal peoples continue to suffer intolerable
levels of poverty, unemployment, illiteracy and disease.
Now, the time
has come to pay the rent. The First Nations, Métis and Inuit
peoples
are demanding an end to decades and centuries of agony and countless
national humiliations. The Six Nations land reclamation at Caledonia,
the struggles of the Tyendinaga Mohawks, the KI resistance against
mineral exploration on their traditional territories, the Grassy
Narrows blockade in northwestern Ontario, the rising protests against
Olympics-related resort development on unceded aboriginal lands in
British Columbia - these are among the warnings that the racist and
criminal denial of Aboriginal rights will not be accepted. Despite
legal setbacks, the Manitoba Métis continue their struggle to
reverse
the theft of their lands at the time of Confederation.
The Communist
Party condemns the racist policies of the Harper Tories, and expresses
full solidarity with the May 29 National Day of Action and with all
Aboriginal struggles being conducted across Canada. We will continue to
do our part to help mobilize full support for all these actions.
We want equal
and just relations among all nations in Canada. We want a new,
democratic constitution based on an equal and voluntary partnership of
the Aboriginal peoples, Quebec, and English-speaking Canada,
recognizing the national rights of Aboriginal peoples and Quebec to
self-determination, up to and including secession. We want swift and
just settlement of Aboriginal land claims, including over natural
resources, and for emergency action to improve living conditions,
employment, health and housing of Aboriginal peoples.
No process of
achieving these aims can work without respecting the full national
rights of Aboriginal nations, especially the right of
self-determination and existing treaty and constitutional rights.
We are proud
of our party's vision for Canada. The growing interest by Aboriginal
people in the Communist Party of Canada comes after many decades of
fighting for genuine national equality and for the goal of a socialist
Canada which will make these policies a long overdue reality. Nothing
less can end the tragic consequences of five hundred years of racist
colonial oppression. We will never rest until this terrible legacy is
erased!