CPTnet
27 June 2007
TORONTO: CPT accompanies activists protesting Ontario government granting
licenses to corporations destroying Native lands and livelihoods
by David Milne
With speed and precision, activists from the Rainforest Action Network,
accompanied by members of Christian Peacemaker Teams and Forest Ethics,
erected a nine-metre tall tepee bearing the words "Native Rights Now"
Monday, 25 June 2007, on the lawn in front of the Ontario legislature at
Queens Park in Toronto.
Chief Simon Fobister of the Grassy Narrows First Nation north of Kenora,
Ontario explained to print and television reporters that Weyerhaeuser and
Abitibi, two large logging companies, have clearcut the forest around the
community, destroying the Nation's traditional way of life.
Leah Fontaine, a young person from Grassy Narrows, said, "There's eight
hundred people on the reserve and only fifty have jobs." She noted that the
people on the reserve have not received the economic benefits of logging.
John Cutfeet, a spokesperson from the Kitchenumaykoosib Inninuwug First
Nation, north and east of Grassy Narrows, addressed reporters about the
threat of mining to his remote community's way of life. He and Chief
Fobister asked to meet with Premier McGuinty, whose government has granted
licences to the logging and mining companies over the repeated objections of
First Nations' councils. Premier McGuinty had no time to meet with them,
though he was in Queens Park.
The action lasted until dusk, when the activists took down the tepee and
left the site.
For photos of the action go to:
www.flickr.com/photos/rainforestactionnetwork
<http://www.flickr.com/photos/rainforestactionnetwork>
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