Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

Premiers Commit To Commission Recommendations After Meeting With Native Leaders

The Canadian Press, 15 Jul, 2015 11:14 AM
    HAPPY VALLEY-GOOSE BAY, N.L. — The premier of Newfoundland and Labrador says Canada's premiers support all 94 recommendations arising from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and will work to implement them in their own provinces.
     
    Paul Davis spoke at a closing news conference after meeting with the leaders of national aboriginal organizations in Happy Valley-Goose Bay Wednesday.
     
    Dawn Lavell Harvard, president of the Native Women's Association of Canada, said progress was made despite what she called a lack of respect from the federal government.
     
    Lavell Harvard said Ottawa should have been a participant, but thanked Manitoba for offering to host a second national round table on missing and murdered aboriginal women.
     
    She also thanked Ontario for agreeing to hold a summit on aboriginal women's issues.
     
    Violence against indigenous women and girls is "a grave violation of human rights," Lavell Harvard said, condemning the federal government for not attending Wednesday's meeting.
     
    "It is an insult to the memories of those women and girls that they're not here," Lavell Harvard said of the federal government's absence.
     
    She called it "a slap in the face."
     
     Assembly of First Nations National Chief Perry Bellegarde said he was satisfied that real commitments were made by the premiers, and that provinces are taking the Truth and Reconciliation Commission report seriously.
     
    He said it's all about closing the chasm between aboriginal and non-aboriginal people.
     
    "That gap is not good for our people. It's not good for the provinces, and it's not good for the country. "

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta Will Ban Menthol Tobacco Sales In Four Months To Curb Youth Smoking

    Alberta Will Ban Menthol Tobacco Sales In Four Months To Curb Youth Smoking
    Health Minister Sarah Hoffman says stores in the province will be allowed to sell menthol flavoured tobacco until the end of September in order to clear their stock, but after that it will be illegal.

    Alberta Will Ban Menthol Tobacco Sales In Four Months To Curb Youth Smoking

    Toronto Film Fans Clogging Streets Overnight For Epic 'Suicide Squad' Film Shoot

    Toronto Film Fans Clogging Streets Overnight For Epic 'Suicide Squad' Film Shoot
    TORONTO — For days — nights, really — Toronto's iconic Yonge Street was lined by mobs of giddy gawkers who felt like they'd wandered into the panels of a comic book.

    Toronto Film Fans Clogging Streets Overnight For Epic 'Suicide Squad' Film Shoot

    British Royal Succession Law Will Be Contested In Quebec Court Starting Monday

    British Royal Succession Law Will Be Contested In Quebec Court Starting Monday
    MONTREAL — The birth of Prince George before his sister Charlotte averted the need for a major change in British tradition.

    British Royal Succession Law Will Be Contested In Quebec Court Starting Monday

    RCMP Officers Criticize Roll Out Of Carbines A Year After Three Officers Killed

    RCMP Officers Criticize Roll Out Of Carbines A Year After Three Officers Killed
    RCMP officers who raced to a New Brunswick neighbourhood under siege by Justin Bourque say the force has failed to supply them with recommended guns and training, months after a report urged the organization to do just that.

    RCMP Officers Criticize Roll Out Of Carbines A Year After Three Officers Killed

    Trinidad And Tobago Marks 170 Years Of Indian Arrivals

    Trinidad And Tobago Marks 170 Years Of Indian Arrivals
    Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar, a person of Indian origin, has commemorated the 170th anniversary of the first arrival of East Indians in the island nation, saying that ethnic Indians were a privileged lot.

    Trinidad And Tobago Marks 170 Years Of Indian Arrivals

    Montreal Fashion Industry Suits Up, Uniting To Regain City's Lost Glory

    Montreal Fashion Industry Suits Up, Uniting To Regain City's Lost Glory
    Montreal's fashion sector is trying to regain some of its lost glory as designers, manufacturers and other players in the apparel industry unite in a bid to expand the city's sartorial footprint.

    Montreal Fashion Industry Suits Up, Uniting To Regain City's Lost Glory