Rallies held in Canada to support aboriginal rights
CANADA: Members of Canadian aboriginal communities and human
rights activists have rallied in several cities in Canada and around the world
against Ottawa’s policies violating the rights of the aboriginals. Supporters
of “Idle No More,” a protest movement campaigning for the rights of the
aboriginals in Canada, demonstrated Monday in 30 Canadian cities, including Montreal,
Halifax, Ottawa, Vancouver, and Calgary, despite the country’s freezing winter
weather.
Some 300 protesters marched on Parliament Hill in Ottawa as
MPs returned to the House of Commons after the six-week-long winter break,
urging the MPs to take action on the rights of the indigenous people. Similar
demonstrations were held in several states across the United States, including
Florida, Massachusetts, New York, Texas, Washington State, and North Carolina.
Also in Europe, Idle No More supporters rallied in London,
Paris, and the Swedish city of Malmo. The organizers of the movement said in a
statement on the Idle No More website that the day of action would “peacefully
protest attacks on Democracy, Indigenous Sovereignty, Human Rights and
Environmental Protections when Canadian MPs return to the House of Commons on
January 28th.”
The movement began last November after Attawapiskat First
Nations Chief Theresa Spence began a hunger strike over the violation of
aboriginals’ rights. Spence ended her strike on Thursday after indigenous
groups and opposition parties signed a deal spelling out a list of demands they
would present to the government.
The declaration calls for the government to improve housing
and schools as well as to acknowledge treaty rights for Canada’s 600 native
tribes. The protests over the past two months had prompted the United Nations
to urge Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s government to set up talks in
accordance with the standards expressed in the organization’s Declaration on
the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Since December 14, 2012, indigenous peoples
in Canada have held demonstrations against the government which, on that day,
approved Bill C-45 through parliament to change the rules about aboriginal
lands.
PRESS TV
Hello, this weekend is good for me, since this time i am reading this enormous informative article here at my home. Digital Marketing Agency
ReplyDelete