'A nice day for Kahnawake,' as Canada returns land to Mohawk territory - Action News
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Montreal

'A nice day for Kahnawake,' as Canada returns land to Mohawk territory

Canada has formally approved the return of three sections of land to Kahnawake. In total, 500 acres have now been returned to the Mohawk territory south of Montreal.

Canada formally approved the return of three parcels of land on Tuesday

A few South Shore towns launched a lawsuit against the Quebec government in 2013, after it planned to transfer the land to the federal government, which intended to hand it over to Kahnawake. (CBC )

Canada has formally approved the return of three tracts of land to Kahnawake.

In total, five parcels of land totalling 500 acres have now been returned to the Mohawk territory south of Montreal, and theywill now have full reserve status.

The community's grand chief, Joseph Tokwiro Norton, said regaining the land bodes well for Kahnawake's economic future.

"There's a tremendous amount of relief. People are very happy," Norton told CBC News.

Longstanding legal dispute

Quebec's Superior Court ruled in favour of Kahnawakelast August in adispute overa portion of land bordering Highway 30.

FourSouth Shore municipalities that surround Kahnawake'sterritory launched the lawsuit in 2013 after they objected to theQuebec government's plan to transfer the landto the Mohawk Council of Kahnawake.

Chteauguay,St-Isidore, St-Constant andSte-Catherinehad argued that their municipal taxes paid for infrastructure on the five parcels of land near the highway.

The provincial government said the landhadbeen Mohawk territory all along, however.

The portion of land the government handed back to Kahnwake borders Highway 30 and is approximately 500 acres. (Radio-Canada)

"All those years of waiting [frustrated], going to court, wasted time, wasted opportunities havecome to an end," Norton said.

'A nice day for Kahnawake'

The spokesperson for Kahnawake,Joe Delaronde, said returning the land is highly symbolic.

"It just never happens that way," he said.

"We are accustomed over our history to losing land and to get a little returned like this is a nice day for Kahnawake."

Quebec has committed to returning another 200 acres to the community, which will be identified at a later date, according to the Mohawk Council of Kahnawake.

With files from CBC Montreal's Arian Zarrinkoub