Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Former PMs, First Nations leaders seek to ease tensions between groups

Darpan News Desk Canadian Press, 04 Sep, 2014 10:23 AM
    OTTAWA - Former prime ministers and aboriginal leaders are joining forces in a bid to ease tensions between aboriginal and non-aboriginal groups.
     
    A declaration calling for a new partnership was signed this morning by a coalition of First Nations and political leaders.
     
    The goal of Canadians for a New Partnership is to achieve better living conditions, education, and economic opportunities for aboriginal groups — but first everyone must pledge to work together, the group says.
     
    "Then, and only then, will we enjoy a foundation of trust sturdy enough to overcome the shame of historic harm and contemporary injustices and realize future possibility," the declaration says, according to the Canadians for a New Partnership website.
     
    "The New Partnership is neither deluded about past challenges nor deflated about present circumstances. We believe that hope must be created with the establishment of new trust and enthusiasm."
     
    Former Liberal prime minister Paul Martin and former Progressive Conservative prime minister Joe Clark are among those backing the new initiative.
     
    They are being joined by former leaders of the Assembly of First Nations and the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, as well as former auditor general Sheila Fraser and Justice Murray Sinclair, who led the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
     
    Both Martin and Clark have become increasingly involved in aboriginal issues in the years since they were prime ministers.
     
    But relations between the current federal government and aboriginal groups have hit several major roadblocks since 2008.
     
    That was the year Prime Minister Stephen Harper issued his landmark apology for the treatment of First Nations at residential schools.
     
    The apology was seen as an opportunity to close the gap between the two sides, but conflicts over resource development, education and missing and murdered aboriginal women have soured that relationship in recent years.
     
    The new organization, which as been set up as a corporation, is receiving funding from private foundations, McGill University and the International Boreal Conservative campaign, according to the organization's website.
     
    Among other activities, it intends to run speakers' bureau and a national lecture series, the website says.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Strike Shutters B.C. Public Schools, Students Lament Learning Time Wasted

    Strike Shutters B.C. Public Schools, Students Lament Learning Time Wasted
    The government is giving $40 per day to parents of children 12 and under for each day the strike continues to supplement child care and tutoring costs.

    Strike Shutters B.C. Public Schools, Students Lament Learning Time Wasted

    Access Restricted Around B.C. Wildfire As Crews Mop Up, Cooler Weather Expected

    Access Restricted Around B.C. Wildfire As Crews Mop Up, Cooler Weather Expected
    VANCOUVER - Access around a wildfire in northeastern B.C. has been further restricted even though officials say cooler temperatures are expected to help ease the danger.

    Access Restricted Around B.C. Wildfire As Crews Mop Up, Cooler Weather Expected

    Black Inmate Sues B.C. Over Alleged Kkk Beating And 'torture' By Jail Staff

    Black Inmate Sues B.C. Over Alleged Kkk Beating And 'torture' By Jail Staff
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. - A black inmate is suing the province of British Columbia, alleging he was targeted by the Ku Klux Klan behind bars and endured “torture” at the hands of a sheriff and a guard.

    Black Inmate Sues B.C. Over Alleged Kkk Beating And 'torture' By Jail Staff

    Lawyer For Accused Serial Killer Asks Jury For Second-degree Murder Conviction

    Lawyer For Accused Serial Killer Asks Jury For Second-degree Murder Conviction
    PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. - The lawyer for a British Columbia man accused of killing three women and a 15-year-old girl has asked the jury to convict his client of second-degree murder.

    Lawyer For Accused Serial Killer Asks Jury For Second-degree Murder Conviction

    Some People Think I Am The 'real' Rob Ford: Sheldon Bergstrom

    Some People Think I Am The 'real' Rob Ford: Sheldon Bergstrom
    TORONTO - The Saskatchewan actor who plays the lead role in an upcoming musical comedy about Toronto's embattled mayor says some people think he is the "real" Rob Ford.

    Some People Think I Am The 'real' Rob Ford: Sheldon Bergstrom

    Less work, more play: Quebec elementary school bans homework for the year

    Less work, more play: Quebec elementary school bans homework for the year
    MONTREAL - Students at a Quebec elementary school may be some of the happiest in the country as they prepare for another year in the classroom.

    Less work, more play: Quebec elementary school bans homework for the year