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Manitoba

Feds seeking to settle suits from Sixties Scoop, resolve 'dark chapter'

In a major shift in tactics, the federal government said Wednesday that it wants to negotiate claims resulting from the Sixties Scoop, in which thousands of Indigenous children were taken from their families and placed in non-Indigenous homes.

Change comes after years of litigation and as a judge gets set to rule on $1.3B class action lawsuit

Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett calls the Sixties Scoop period a "dark and painful" chapter for Canada. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)
In a major shift in tactics, the federal government said Wednesday that it wants to negotiate claims resulting from the Sixties Scoop, in which thousands of Indigenous children were taken from their families and placed in non-Indigenous homes.

The change, which comes after years of litigation and as a judge gets set to rule on a $1.3-billion class action lawsuit in Ontario, aims to resolve a "dark and painful chapter" in Canada's history, Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett told the House of Commons.

"I am very proud to say that we are adversaries no more and that negotiation rather than litigation is our government's preferred route to settle these differences and right historical wrongs," Bennett said. "Resolving these cases is an important step in our journey of reconciliation with Indigenous peoples."

Bennett's statementwas short on details or time frames.

Sixties Scoop survivorColleenRajottetold CBC News she wanted more information but was glad to see the government change its tactics.

"If that's what it takesis launching a class action lawsuit to get their attention,that's good," saidRajotte. "We deserve to have this settled."

Bennett's announcement comes after a last-minute cancellation of a hearing that the judge in the Ontario case had requested for Thursday.

Hearing scrapped

Two former Indigenousleaders were expected to tell the court about the advice they would have given the government had they been asked on helping on-reserve children retain their cultural identities after placement in non-Indigenous homes.

Instead, government lawyers this week informed Superior Court Justice Edward Belobaba that they now had no plans to cross-examine the aging elders or any further evidence to tender, documents show.

In response, Belobaba scrapped the hearing and instead asked for brief written submissions to be filed before the weekend. He also said he expected to announce a date for his ruling next week.

"To the extent the public is led to believe that the Liberal government is embracing First Nations towards reconciliation, the life of this case suggests the contrary," Jeffery Wilson, the plaintiffs' lawyer, said Wednesday.

The Ontario action filed in 2009 alleges about 16,000 at-risk Indigenous children in Ontario suffered a devastating loss of identity when they were placed in non-Indigenoushomes from 1965 to 1984 under terms of a federal-provincial agreement.

The plaintiffs maintain the government violated the agreement by failing to consult with the various Indian bands about the child-welfare program an assertion Belobaba appeared to have accepted.

The government does admit the children may have suffered harm but insists it is not liable because it had no "duty of care" toward them, and that it was acting with good intentions within the prevailing norms of the day.

Two separate suits that focus on the apprehension of the Indigenouschildren in British Columbia and Manitoba have yet to be certified as class actions.

The Ontario plaintiff want Belobaba to find in their favour without further ado, while Ottawa wants him to toss the action. If he sides with the plaintiffs, the next step would be to determine what damages they deserve.

'I lost everything,' survivor says

Carla Williams was born in Fisher River Cree Nation in Manitoba. She says she was taken from her family in 1968, just before her fourth birthday.

She went through several foster homes before being adopted by a family overseas. She was sexually abused by her adopted father for years, she said, and had two children by him.

She tried to run away several times and attempted suicide while living with the family, she said.

"I just had such a hard time after that to survive. A lot of moving," she said.

She has lived with post-traumatic stress disorder and thought of suicide several times since leaving the home, she said.

She said she hopes the matter is settled out of court to avoid potentially painful court proceedings.

"I'm a Sixties Scoop survivor, and I'm proud of it," she said.

Government's argument 'cynical'

At a hearing in December in which the government argued it had no legal obligation toward the children, Belobaba ordered Thursday's now cancelled mini-hearing on the narrow question of what bands might have told Ottawa.

Kinzie Halcrow, who was born in Manitoba but grew up in Texas, was emotional during a Sixties Scoop apology ceremony held in Manitoba in 2015. (Karen Pauls/CBC)

Wilmer Nadjiwon, 95, was chief of Chippewas Nawash Nation for 14 years starting in 1964, had planned to testify.

"What we would have done is tell the federal minister of Indian affairs that this is not the way to respect our people, not the way to preserve our identity and honour our special relationship with the Crown," Nadjiwon says in an affidavit.

"And if our children are forced to leave, we need to know they will return to the reserve because they have family here who love them that they have a special place in our community but we did not have the opportunity to say these things."

The plaintiffs received some high-profile support from philosopher-author and activist John Ralston Saul this week. In a statement obtained by The Canadian Press, Saul decried what he called the government's "cynical" argument that it could not have foreseen the cultural confusion the children suffered.

"The very idea that the Crown would argue a lack of foresight is itself a form of evil," Saul says. "Given the history of
residential schools and children forcibly being taken from their families, it is simply inconceivable that officers of the Crown could claim in court that they could not imagine the outcome."

With files from CBC's Erin Brohman