--- On Thu, 3/22/12, RDIABO <rdi...@rogers.com> wrote:

From: RDIABO <rdi...@rogers.com>
Subject: Fw: [TRA] 'Dysfunctional' aboriginals could benefit from dev't: Joe 
Oliver
To: undisclosed-recipi...@yahoo.com
Received: Thursday, March 22, 2012, 8:33 AM


 
 





FYI


 

From: Jaime Sanchez 
Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2012 11:59 PM
To: titleandrightsallia...@lists.onenw.org 

Subject: [TRA] 'Dysfunctional' aboriginals could benefit from dev't: 
Joe Oliver
 




…without question, this requires a 
response…

 


‘Dysfunctional’ 
aboriginals could benefit from development: Joe Oliver
  
By 
FIONA ANDERSON, Vancouver Sun March 21, 2012 6:02 PM 

Many aboriginal 
communities are “socially dysfunctional,” and could benefit from developments 
that bring jobs and revenue to them, Canada’s Minister of Natural Resources Joe 
Oliver said at a Vancouver Board of Trade breakfast Wednesday.

Oliver was 
talking about the need to amend Canada’s regulatory process to ensure mining 
and 
other resource-development projects could proceed in a timely 
fashion.

But amendments to the current environmental assessment process — 
which Oliver said would be introduced within the next few months — would still 
ensure the projects were “safe for Canadians and safe for the environment,” he 
said.

That includes protecting the interests of aboriginal people, Oliver 
said in response to a question from the audience.

The government has “a 
moral and constitutional obligation to consult with aboriginal communities and 
to accommodate if necessary and we intend to meet our obligations in that 
regard,” he said.

“The developments we are looking at have the capacity 
to be truly transformative to a lot of aboriginal communities. This is really a 
tremendous opportunity to transform communities that have been socially 
dysfunctional, that haven’t had economic opportunities, haven’t had employment 
opportunities.”

When asked to elaborate to reporters after his talk, 
Oliver said: “What we want to do is provide the economic opportunity to give 
them hope, to move them from despair to hope, where their youth can be 
employed, 
where people of all ages have an opportunity to have jobs that will provide 
them 
the chance to have a good, even a great, standard of living.”

“We’re very 
respectful of the traditional way of life of aboriginal communities. It’s up to 
them of course to preserve what they believe is worthy of preserving. We’re not 
taking a paternalistic approach in that regard. That’s their 
decision.

“But what these projects bring is an enhanced economic 
opportunity which doesn’t have to be inconsistent with some of their core 
values.”

Arnold Clifton, chief councillor of the Gitga’at First Nation, 
called the language “insulting.”

The Gitga’at oppose Enbridge Inc.’s 
$5.5-billion pipeline that would bring bitumen along northern B.C. to Kitimat 
for tankers that would go through Douglas Channel, where the Gitga’at are 
located.

“This language is insulting to first nations and the minister 
should apologize,” Clifton said in a news release. “This slip-of-the tongue 
shows stereotypes about first nations people are alive and well in the federal 
government and it helps explain why this government has such a mistrustful and 
dysfunctional relationship with aboriginal communities.”

Marilyn 
Baptiste, chief of the Xeni Gwet’in First Nation, which opposes Taseko’s 
$1-billion New Prosperity mine near Williams Lake, also found the wording 
upsetting.

Canada has endorsed the United Nations Declaration on the 
Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which promises to respect indigenous rights and 
eliminate racial discrimination, Baptiste said.

“Yet B.C. and Canada are 
continuing to move forward [with] business as usual,” she said. “Furthermore 
they are changing processes, acts and legislation for the sake of industry and 
removing protections to the environment, fish and their habitat. That’s not 
acceptable.”

Pierre Gratton, president and CEO of the Mining Association 
of Canada, called the minister’s choice of words “unfortunate.”

“The 
minister used an unfortunate choice of words to express a positive sentiment: 
Mining can offer first nations significant opportunities for economic and 
community progress,” Gratton wrote in an email.

“Mining is the largest 
private sector employer of aboriginal Canadians and the depth and breadth of 
our 
partnerships continue to evolve and deepen. This can accelerate as the industry 
expands .”

fionaander...@vancouversun.comstwitter.com/fionaanderson

© 
Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Read more: 
http://www.vancouversun.com/business/Dysfunctional+aboriginals+need/6339022/story.html#ixzz1pntfBSOq


 




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