Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Indian Chiefs Won't Participate In Reconciliation Event Attended By Royals

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Sep, 2016 12:55 PM
    VICTORIA — A ceremony involving the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge meant to symbolize the reconciliation of British Columbia's Aboriginal Peoples has been rebuffed by a First Nations group.
     
    Grand Chief Stewart Philip, the leader of the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, said Monday he won't be taking part or supporting the Black Rod Ceremony scheduled to be held Monday involving Prince William and Kate.
     
    Prince William is scheduled to add a final ring, symbolizing aboriginal reconciliation, to the Black Rod, a ceremonial staff used on formal occasions when the Queen or lieutenant-governor are present in the legislative assembly.
     
    The current three rings on the staff represent the Crown, Canada and British Columbia, but the provincial government says there have been requests for a fourth ring to signify the link with indigenous peoples, since the staff was created in 2012 to mark the Queen's Diamond Jubilee.
     
    But Philip said after an intense three-day debate at the group's annual general meeting, the chiefs decided it wouldn't be appropriate for him to participate in a reconciliation ceremony. The union represents more than half of the 203 First Nations in the province.
     
    He said the federal government has made little progress improving the lives of First Nations, while the provincial government pushes ahead with projects opposed by aboriginal groups, such as liquefied natural gas developments and the Site C hydroelectric dam.
     
     
    "I apologize for any inconvenience we may have caused with our decision. We do not mean any disrespect. It is a matter of principle," Philip said in a news release.
     
    The provincial government couldn't immediately be reached for comment.
     
    Philip said he can't in good conscience attend when he remembers the deepening poverty in First Nation communities, the missing and murdered indigenous women and girls, and the ongoing negligence of indigenous child welfare policies.  
     
    "Certainly our people on the ground that are in the midst of dealing with these tragedies on a daily basis will appreciate us standing up and acknowledging their plight and not blindly participating in yet another grandiose pomp and ceremony that would create the illusion that things in our communities are progressing forward," he said in an interview Monday.
     
    Stephen Point, the first indigenous lieutenant-governor in B.C., is expected to be at the ceremony.
     
    Prince William and Kate tour the First Nations community of Bella Bella on B.C.'s central coast Monday before giving official recognition of the Great Bear Rainforest as part of the Queen's Commonwealth Canopy.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Men Charged With Stealing Marijuana From Ontario Man's Legal Grow Operation

    Men Charged With Stealing Marijuana From Ontario Man's Legal Grow Operation
    KAWARTHA LAKES, Ont. — Two Ontario men are facing charges after allegedly stealing marijuana from a legal grow operation.

    Men Charged With Stealing Marijuana From Ontario Man's Legal Grow Operation

    India-Based Printer Named In Million Dollar Mail Fraud In America

    India-Based Printer Named In Million Dollar Mail Fraud In America
    US Justice Department, accused companies and individuals wrote letters to thousands of people wrongly claiming that the recipient had won, or will soon win, cash or valuable prizes.

    India-Based Printer Named In Million Dollar Mail Fraud In America

    Canada's Foreign-language Oscar Submission To Be Announced Today In Montreal

    Canada's Foreign-language Oscar Submission To Be Announced Today In Montreal
      The announcement will be made official in Montreal later today.

    Canada's Foreign-language Oscar Submission To Be Announced Today In Montreal

    Sick Woman Who Didn't Know Of Citizenship Issue Faces Deportation: Advocacy Group

    Sick Woman Who Didn't Know Of Citizenship Issue Faces Deportation: Advocacy Group
    Fliss Cramman was brought to Canada decades ago as a child and only recently became aware she was not a Canadian citizen.

    Sick Woman Who Didn't Know Of Citizenship Issue Faces Deportation: Advocacy Group

    RCMP Re-Open Investigation Into The Death Of Pepper Sprayed Inmate

    RCMP  Re-Open Investigation Into The Death Of Pepper Sprayed Inmate
    FREDERICTON — The RCMP has reopened the investigation of the death of a 33-year-old inmate who was pepper sprayed four times in the face in rapid succession last year at Dorchester Penitentiary in New Brunswick.

    RCMP Re-Open Investigation Into The Death Of Pepper Sprayed Inmate

    Fort McMurray Residents Shocked At Steep Direct Energy Power Bills

    Fort McMurray Residents Shocked At Steep Direct Energy Power Bills
    Energy bills arriving in Fort McMurray, Alta., months after a wildfire forced the entire city to evacuate have come as a shock to some residents still trying to restore some normalcy to their lives.

    Fort McMurray Residents Shocked At Steep Direct Energy Power Bills