04) JAILED ALGONQUIN LEADER BEGINS HUNGER
STRIKE
(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
released by Ardoch Algonquin First Nation, May 15, 2008
On Feb. 15, Ardoch
Algonquin First Nation (AAFN) spokesperson Robert Lovelace was
sentenced in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice in Kingston to 6
months in maximum security, plus crippling fines, for peacefully
protesting uranium mining in the Ardoch homeland. Chief Paula Sherman
was fined $15,000 and given until today to pay the fine, failing which
she will be jailed.
On March 17,
a Superior Court judge in Thunder Bay sentenced six leaders of the
Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug (KI) to six months after they were found
in contempt of court in a dispute which is virtually identical to that
of the Ardoch Algonquins.
The jailing
of respected, law-abiding community leaders has had a devastating
impact on our communities, particularly on the families of those
incarcerated. The indifference shown by the McGuinty government towards
the rights of First Nation communities and the imposition of long jail
terms and crippling fines in the name of the rule of law has further
eroded respect for both the legal system and the government of Ontario
in the eyes of First Nations people in this province.
The cases of
the KI Six and Robert Lovelace are strikingly similar. In both cases
Ontario gave approvals to mining companies to conduct aggressive
mineral exploration on land claimed by First Nations as their own. In
both cases this approval was given without any consultation with
affected communities, forcing the First Nations to take action to end
the illegal exploration when the government refused to act. In both
cases the mining company sought and obtained court injunctions to end
the peaceful protests of the First Nations, while lawyers representing
Ontario supported the mining industry's legal manoeuvres at every stage.
For the first
month of Bob Lovelace's incarceration, the government of Ontario said
nothing, remaining indifferent to this travesty. Since the jailing of
the KI Six, and public outcry which followed, the Minister of
Aboriginal Affairs, Michael Bryant, has told the media that he has bent
over backwards to try to resolve the disputes which led to the
incarceration of seven First Nations leaders from our two communities.
He also claims that he wishes to see the incarcerated communities
leaders freed from jail.
We want to set the record straight.
In fact,
there has been no response from Minister Bryant to any of our proposals
for peacefully resolving the dispute. Minister Bryant's staff also has
not responded to several calls and emails seeking a response to our
proposals. To put it bluntly, Michael Bryant is a liar.
Bob Lovelace
is now entering his fourth month in jail while the KI Six are about to
begin their third month of incarceration. They are prisoners of
conscience, jailed by the government of Ontario to send a message that
the interests of the mining industry will trump Aboriginal rights and
the environment of Ontario.
Lovelace, who
turned 60 in jail, announced that he will begin a hunger strike
tomorrow [May 16] to press the government to respond to Ardoch's
request for good faith negotiations. "I do not want my children and
grandchildren to have to go through what we are going through," he
said. "Starting tomorrow I will consume only water in the hopes that
our cry for justice will be heard by Mr. McGuinty and Mr. Bryant."
Chief Paula
Sherman said: "I will soon be going to jail because I cannot and will
not pay this unjust fine. I am a single mother with three dependents
whose only crime is the defense of our land. Like Bob Lovelace and the
KI 6, I would rather go to jail than take food out of my children's
mouths or let our land be destroyed."
Acting
Co-Chief Mireille Lapointe added, "We are sickened by the hypocrisy of
the McGuinty government. While honest, conscientious community leaders
languish in their jails for peacefully protecting our land from uranium
mining, all these politicians care about is their public image. They
are lying when they say they are trying to resolve these disputes. They
have done nothing at all and continue to show total indifference. They
do not even respond to our letters, calls and emails asking for
negotiations, meanwhile claiming they care about us and our land."
Ardoch and KI
remain committed to resolving these disputes peacefully, through
negotiations which lead to responsible, cooperative land use planning.
We call on all citizens of Ontario to support the unconditional release
of our leaders and negotiators by joining us at Queen's Park on May 26
at the Gathering of Mother Earth's Protectors.