Close X
Sunday, December 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Status Indian Player Considers Human Rights Complaint After Exclusion From Basketball Tourney

The Canadian Press, 12 Feb, 2016 11:29 AM
    VANCOUVER — A young Calgary man says a First Nations basketball organization's decision to bar him from a tournament in northern British Columbia is discriminatory.
     
    Josiah Wilson, 22, said he is a status Indian who was adopted from Haiti as a baby and is a member of the Heiltsuk Nation in Bella Bella, B.C.
     
    Wilson said he played for a junior aboriginal team for two years and was about to enter his third All Native Basketball Tournament with an intermediate men's team this week but was told he could no longer play.
     
    "The Heiltsuk people are really upset about it," Wilson said from Calgary. "They're all really mad and upset that I'm not allowed to play with them this year. Everybody's saying why are they coming at me now after seeing me play for two years and now saying I can't play?"
     
    Wilson said he went to visit his grandmother in Bella Coola last year and decided to stay and train with his team for over four months before returning home to Calgary to continue training, only to later learn he'd be sidelined.
     
    The eight-day tournament in Prince Rupert, B.C., ends on Sunday.
     
    His father Don Wilson said the tournament committee claims his son lacks the aboriginal bloodlines to participate based on a so-called blood quantum, which specifies anyone claiming to be indigenous must be one-eighth aboriginal.
     
    "The concept is a colonial concept that has been imposed on aboriginal people. It's not part of our cultural, traditional belief system, certainly not for the Heiltsuk Nation.
     
    "A lot of us are left feeling very confused as to why the All Native Basketball committee would adhere to that type of concept because it's very anti-First Nations."
     
    Wilson, an obstetrician in Calgary, said his son showed the organization his status card when he started playing on a junior team and that he doesn't understand why the committee has now excluded him.
     
    "Somehow my son's participation was protested to the All Native Basketball Tournament committee and they responded by issuing a letter banning him from further involvement," he said in a telephone interview, adding that he will be filing a complaint with the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal.
     
    The All Native Basketball Tournament committee did not return calls for comment. 
     
    Wilson said he has tried to get the decision reversed so his son can continue playing a sport he loves but the committee has not changed its decision.
     
    "To be fully excluded was very painful for him because he wants to go and participate with his cousins and his friends, his teammates, our family and our extended community that are back home in Bella Bella."
     
    Wilson said the tournament has existed since the 1930s and his family has taken part in it for decades. It is held for First Nations up and down the B.C. coast.
     
    "It's a fantastic time and it really spurred a lot of pride in the achievement of our players, and just a great time of cultural sharing and sportsmanship," he said.
     
    Heiltsuk Nation Chief Marilyn Slett said the tribal council and its traditional leadership sent a joint letter to the basketball committee asking that its decision be reversed.
     
    "We're very disappointed," she said from Bella Bella.
     
    "We felt that he was being treated very unfairly and it was discriminatory against Josiah."
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    The IT crowd: Federal government's IT department can't prove savings

    The audit found Shared Services Canada knowingly went ahead in February 2015 with the first wave of a new, unified email system for the federal government that had two high security risks that were mitigated in July 2015.

    The IT crowd: Federal government's IT department can't prove savings

    Jason Kenney Heckles Harjit Sajjan, Liberals Call Him A Racist For 'English' Translation Remark

    Jason Kenney Heckles Harjit Sajjan, Liberals Call Him A Racist For 'English' Translation Remark
    Conservative MP Jason Kenney sparked controversy in question period Monday with a heckle directed at Canada's defence minister that a Liberal MP later deemed "racist"

    Jason Kenney Heckles Harjit Sajjan, Liberals Call Him A Racist For 'English' Translation Remark

    B.C. Housing Studying Foreign Ownership In Real Estate Market: Premier Clark

    B.C. Housing Studying Foreign Ownership In Real Estate Market: Premier Clark
    Housing affordability is a hot topic in Vancouver, where the rental-vacancy rate is below one per cent and the average price of a home on the west side is now more than $2.5 million.

    B.C. Housing Studying Foreign Ownership In Real Estate Market: Premier Clark

    Passengers Taken Off Vancouver-To-Maui WestJet Flight After Tire Blows On Runway

    Passengers Taken Off Vancouver-To-Maui WestJet Flight After Tire Blows On Runway
    First responders got the passengers off the plane on the runway before they were taken back to the terminal by bus.

    Passengers Taken Off Vancouver-To-Maui WestJet Flight After Tire Blows On Runway

    Hundreds Of Ontario Adoptions On Hold While Commission Reviews Motherisk Cases

    Hundreds Of Ontario Adoptions On Hold While Commission Reviews Motherisk Cases
    TORONTO — Hundreds of adoptions have been put on hold in Ontario as a provincially appointed commission reviews child protection cases involving flawed drug tests.

    Hundreds Of Ontario Adoptions On Hold While Commission Reviews Motherisk Cases

    B.C. Chief Coroner Expects To Know Cause Of Deadly Avalanche That Killed Five

    B.C. Chief Coroner Expects To Know Cause Of Deadly Avalanche That Killed Five
    Coroner Barb McLintock says investigators have "nearly always" been able to determine what triggered previous slides.

    B.C. Chief Coroner Expects To Know Cause Of Deadly Avalanche That Killed Five