msquebanh, to ukteachers
@msquebanh@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

Bourque Bearskin & Victoria Dick of are currently working on creating a , “from the ground up”, called the & program for .

For Bourque Bearskin and Dick, the work they’ve been doing over the last few years, including the development of the , is better aligning with the principles of .

https://www.capitaldaily.ca/news/two-indigenous-nurses-pave-way-overcoming-colonial-past-health-care

msquebanh, to humanrights
@msquebanh@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

#FirstNationsLeadershipCouncil #FNLC condemned a #misleading & factually incorrect March 22 statement from the #BCUnitedCaucus which criticized a recently drafted #Haida Title Land Agreement.

The FNLC said #BCUnited’s statement — which called for an immediate pause in #LandTitle talks — politicized #FirstNations peoples’ #HumanRights as outlined by the #UnitedNations Declaration on the Rights of #IndigenousPeoples #UNDRIP

https://www.cheknews.ca/first-nations-group-condemns-bc-united-statement-on-haida-land-agreement-1196845

#BCpoli #UncededNativeLand #IndigenousBC

thetyee, to random

While B.C. has been working to bring policing into alignment with the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, it has hit a major hurdle: refusing to commit to replacing the RCMP with provincial and Indigenous police.

@afh reports.

https://thetyee.ca/News/2024/02/09/Police-Reform-Talks-Stalled/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=editorial

rjpayne, to Canada
@rjpayne@mastodon.social avatar
miki_lou, to nuclear
@miki_lou@mastodon.social avatar

More plans to dump waste on territories without free, prior and informed consent. https://www.ourcommons.ca/petitions/en/Petition/Details?Petition=e-4676

miki_lou, to Canada
@miki_lou@mastodon.social avatar

" International is calling for an immediate halt to construction and use of the pipeline and the withdrawal of police and private security forces from Wet'suwet'en territory in northern B.C., citing what it considers ongoing against activists resisting construction." https://www.cbc.ca/news/indigenous/amnesty-international-wetsuweten-human-rights-1.7053748?__vfz=medium%3Dsharebar

DoomsdaysCW, to australia

A Secretive Network Is Fighting in and , Expert Says

It’s all part of a global playbook from the U.S.-based to protect the profits of and companies, argues a Sydney researcher.

By Geoff Dembicki
Oct 10, 2023

"A campaign to deny a voice in Australia’s national Parliament is using tactics similar to an earlier conservative legal battle against communities in Canada, a new research paper argues.

"That’s no coincidence, according to the paper’s author Jeremy Walker, because think tanks linked to these efforts in Canada and Australia belong to a secretive U.S. organization called the Atlas Network that’s received support from , and companies and operates in nearly 100 countries.

"'The coordinated opposition to Indigenous constitutional recognition by the Australian arm of the Atlas Network we can assume is motivated by the same intentions underlying the permanent Atlas campaign against climate policy [globally],' writes Walker, a senior lecturer in social and political sciences at the University of Technology Sydney in Australia.
'That is, to minimise the possibility of democratic government challenging the ever-expanding frontier of fossil fuel extraction,' he argues, a charge one conservative Australian advocacy group strongly denies.

"On , Australians will vote 'yes' or 'no' in a referendum that would amend the country’s constitution to create a permanent First Nations advisory body in the country’s Parliament.

"'Most Australians understand that generations of Australian government policy have failed First Nations peoples,' UNSW Sydney professor Megan Davis, who is a Cobble Cobble woman of the Barunggam Nation, told the Guardian earlier this year. 'The voice referendum is an opportunity for all of us Australians to make the difference.'

"Earlier this spring national support for the 'yes' position was over 60 percent but by September it had collapsed to 40 percent or less, polling cited by Walker suggests.
Walker attributes that largely to the efforts of a advocacy group called , which has led an extensive media campaign urging people to vote 'No' in the referendum. 'The ‘Indigenous Voice to Parliament’ will wreck our Constitution, rewire our democracy, and divide Australians by race. It’s divisive, it’s dangerous, it’s expensive and it’s not fair,' reads a website created by Advance.
The campaign’s main spokespeople are Indigenous – Warren Mundine and Australian Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price – and they have been interviewed frequently in the country’s mainstream media. Yet few Australians are aware of Mundine and Price’s connections to the wider Atlas Network, Walker argues.

"Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price is another ‘No’ campaigner with Atlas ties.
Both 'No' campaigners are long-time contributors to the Centre for Independent Studies, Walker’s paper explains, a conservative think tank founded in 1976 with grants from resource extraction companies such as , and .
The Center for Independent Studies is in turn a member of the Atlas Network, a Virginia-based organization whose members include hundreds of conservative think tanks and organizations across the world, many of whom are active spreaders of doubt about the severity of climate change.
One of the Center for Independent Studies’ first board members, Maurice Newman, was revealed as an early backer of the organization Advance in 2018, which is now leading efforts against the Indigenous referendum. And Advance’s lead 'No' campaigner Mundine is chairman of LibertyWorks, a conservative group also associated with the Atlas Network.

"Despite these connections, Advance strongly disputes any association with Atlas.
'We have never heard of the Atlas Network and absolutely reject the incorrect assertion we have any connection to them at all,' a spokesperson for Advance wrote in an email to DeSmog. 'The idea that our referendum campaign is being conducted or coordinated by ‘fossil-fuel corporations and their allies’ or the Atlas Network is wrong and frankly bizarre.'

"In addition to Australia and dozens of other countries, several Atlas Network members are based in Canada. And they too have led efforts attempting to undermine greater recognition of Indigenous legal rights. An Ottawa-based think tank and Atlas member called the MacDonald Laurier Institute spent years advocating against Canada’s federal government adopting the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, otherwise known as .

"That’s because UNDRIP contained clauses that could potentially give Canada’s Indigenous peoples greater say over fossil fuel and natural resource projects on their territories. 'It is difficult to overstate the legal and economic disruptions that may have followed from such a step,' read documents produced by the Atlas Network and the Macdonald Laurier Institute that were obtained by DeSmog.

"The think tank has actively cultivated Indigenous representatives as the face of its advocacy efforts on this and other natural resources issues in order to provide 'a shield against opponents that is hard to undermine,' according to the documents. First Nations critics refer to such strategies as '.'

"'It’s a way of [industry] making their claims about their relationship with Indigenous peoples sound better than they actually are in reality,' Kris Statnyk, a First Nation lawyer based in British Columbia, told Drilled this summer.

"Walker sees a parallel between those tactics, and the current effort in Australia to prevent First Nations from having greater representation in that country’s Parliament. The 'No' campaign led by the group Advance prominently features Indigenous Australians arguing against the referendum, despite polling commissioned by advocates suggesting that 80 percent or more of First Nations people in the country support the initiative.
Like in Canada, some Australian fossil fuel and mining projects are located in or adjacent to the traditional territories of First Nations.

"Several Indigenous communities have led legal challenges against gas and coal expansion. 'Should an Indigenous Voice be constitutionalised in Parliament, First Nations representatives might raise objections to such fossil and mining projects,' Walker writes.
He argues that this is what’s at stake in the upcoming referendum vote.

"'The effort to deny Aboriginal Australians a voice is part of a global playbook from Atlas and its allies,' Walker told DeSmog. 'They’ve also used it in Canada and likely anywhere else that greater Indigenous rights could impact fossil fuel and mining profits.'"

https://www.desmog.com/2023/10/10/a-secretive-network-is-fighting-indigenous-rights-in-australia-and-canada-expert-says/

miki_lou, to random
@miki_lou@mastodon.social avatar

WOW! "The government’s new amendments to the Act will have politicians assess project safety and closure plans, rather than technical experts." https://thenarwhal.ca/ontario-mining-act-george-pirie/

miki_lou,
@miki_lou@mastodon.social avatar

@myeyesaredim I think Lawrence Martin nails it. Doug Ford doesn't care one bit about the safety and of nor legal requirements to honour the treaties, , , or any other laws that respect Indigenous nations. Ford is all about serving his corporate buddies whether companies. real estate developers, private health providers, etc.......

drrimmer, to brisbane
@drrimmer@aus.social avatar
drrimmer,
@drrimmer@aus.social avatar
drrimmer,
@drrimmer@aus.social avatar
drrimmer,
@drrimmer@aus.social avatar
Windspeaker, to Quebec

Murchison Minerals has been served an eviction notice not once, but twice by the Innu government for Uashat mak Mani-utenam.

The area the mining company states it is “eager” to explore is in Innu territory. Despite the “sheer number of high priority targets” identified and the “huge potential” of the Nickel-Copper-Cobalt project in Quebec, the Innu are determined to keep Murchison out.

https://windspeaker.com/news/windspeaker-news/mineral-company-evicted-innu-territory-unwanted-incompatible-exploration

thetyee, to random

: The RCMP spent $11 million on patrolling a resource road on territory to protect a pipeline project — despite no significant police actions in the area, according to documents obtained by The Tyee.

https://thetyee.ca/News/2023/09/11/RCMP-Spending-on-CGL-Pipeline/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=editorial

LALegault,
@LALegault@newsie.social avatar

@thetyee They are terrorizing the matriarchs and the whole country is just letting it happen.

drrimmer, to auspol
@drrimmer@aus.social avatar

Johnathan Thurston, Eddie Betts and Evonne Goolagong Cawley back yes vote in Indigenous voice pamphlet https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2023/jul/18/johnathan-thurston-eddie-betts-and-evonne-goolagong-cawley-back-yes-vote-in-indigenous-voice-pamphlet Official pro-voice essay, written by the government, calls on Australians to ‘vote yes for unity, hope and to make a positive difference’.

drrimmer, to climate
@drrimmer@aus.social avatar

Climate Litigation - Evidence of Climate Harms Given On Country

https://phifinneymcdonald.com/evidence-of-climate-harms-given-on-country/

Hearings for the potentially groundbreaking Australian Climate Case will take place On Country in the Torres Strait (Zenadth Kes), 5-19 June 2023. Guda Maluyligal plaintiffs Uncle Pabai Pabai and Uncle Paul Kabai from the islands of Boigu and Saibai will give evidence of the climate harms experienced by these communities on the frontline of Australia’s impending climate disaster.

drrimmer, to random
@drrimmer@aus.social avatar
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