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http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=1845&ncid=1845&e=7&u=/cpres
s/20040526/ca_pr_on_na/mohawks_violence

Quebec minister sparks outrage over comments about aboriginal violence

Tue May 25, 7:50 PM ET

MARTIN OUELLET

QUEBEC (CP) - A Mohawk chief and opposition politicians expressed outrage
Tuesday after a provincial minister said aboriginals were more violent than
the rest of Canadian society.

Public Security Minister Jacques Chagnon made the comments in the
legislature during remarks about the embattled Mohawk community of
Kanesatake, west of Montreal, which is embroiled in a tense policing
dispute. "I don't think it's a secret to anyone that in aboriginal
societies and in Kanesatake society, there is a level of violence that is
not found elsewhere," the minister said during Question Period.

The minister made similar comments in an interview published Tuesday in Le
Journal de Montreal in which he said Kanesatake is "a much more violent
community than the rest of society."

Chagnon also told the newspaper that "when a crow flies by (in Kanesatake)
and someone isn't happy, they pull out their 12 (gauge shotgun) and fire at
the crow. We don't see that anywhere else."

Chagnon initially refused opposition demands for an apology on Tuesday,
saying his comments were based on facts.

But he said later in the day that he regretted the remarks.

"I am sorry that I have upset people," he told reporters at the
legislature.

"If I have upset people, if people felt insulted by the comments, I most
certainly regret it because that wasn't at all my intention."

Kanesatake Grand Chief James Gabriel, who was forced out of the settlement
in January when his house was torched by dissidents, said he was insulted
by the minister's comments.

"He's treating us like savages by saying that we're more violent than the
rest of Canada," Gabriel said in an interview.

"If the public security minister. . .doesn't support us in our efforts to
allow Mohawk police to enter (Kanesatake), there will be civil disorder."

Gabriel has been governing in exile since his house was torched during a
standoff last January that was touched off when he brought in 50 aboriginal
police officers to crack down on organized crime.

Earlier this month, masked dissidents wearing army fatigues hurled stones
and other objects at recently-appointed Mohawk officers trying to enter
Kanesatake.

The Mohawk officers have yet to begin their patrols, and provincial
officers have been policing the community in the interim.

Chagnon has taken heat from natives and political adversaries during the
five-month dispute.

Earlier this month, he announced that a joint force of the RCMP, provincial
and Mohawk police would begin patrolling Kanesatake, but Gabriel quickly
denied the announcement after dissidents warned of violence.

Action democratique du Quebec Leader Mario Dumont said Tuesday he was
shocked by Chagnon's recent comments and called for Premier Jean Charest to
fire him.

"These are preposterous and irresponsible comments," said Dumont, adding
Chagnon's handling of the policing dispute was a "comedy of errors."

Parti Quebecois critic Stephane Bedard said Chagnon's comments were a
"crude error" that would only inflame an already tense situation.

Kanesatake was the scene of a 1990 land-claims standoff in which armed
warriors confronted provincial police and an officer was shot and killed.

Native News North
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