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'Holding Canada to account': Crown-Indigenous minister meets with P.E.I.'s First Nations leaders

Helping First Nations on their path to self-determination is something the Canadian government needs to do to entrench Indigenous rights, says Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett.

'This is about treating the First Nations peoples and honouring those inherent rights'

Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett says consultations so far have indicated First Nations want to see an oversight body established once agreements are reached. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

Helping First Nations on their path to self-determination is something the Canadian government needs to do to entrenchIndigenous rights, says Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett.

Bennett was inP.E.I. Wednesday as part of a national tour to develop a legal framework to recognizeIndigenous rights, and met withAbegweitFirst Nation Chief Brian Francis andLennoxIsland First Nation Chief MatildaRamjattan.

"It's a very exciting time as we have this opportunity to reconstitute nations, theMi'kmaqnation on P.E.I., even the greaterMi'kmaqnation across Atlantic Canada," she told CBC's Island Morning.

The new framework is meantto cut down on costly legal battles between First Nations and the federal governmentand help develop self-governance.

'This is a recognition of rights'

Bennett has been involved in 90 meetings to date and she said the most common theme is getting rid of the barriers that stand in the way of reachingself-determination and self-governance.

"This is a recognition of rights, respect, cooperation and partnership," she said.

This is mainly about holding Canada to account, our code of conduct of how we now deal differently with First Nations, Inuit andMetis. Carolyn Bennett

The government's goal during this period of consultation is to "make it feel like a real partnership," she said,as opposed to the paternalism that's been in effect since before Confederation.

"This is about treating the First Nations peoples and honouring those inherent rights that they have had," she said.

"And making sure that what was negotiated in the constitution in 1982 is now a full box of rights and not just this empty box that has to be proven in court."

Focused meetings on P.E.I.

When asked why she was not going to meet with theNative Council of P.E.I., Bennett said she was working within atight timeline and the consultation process was not dealing with the non-status component.

The Native Council represents off-reserve and non-status Aboriginal people.

Abegweit First Nation Chief Brian Francis says 'We have a minister and a government that we feel really wants to move this agenda forward in a collaborative way.' (CBC)

"Right now, with this shortened time I have on the Island, we've got to get this work done on the section 35 rights," Bennett said."We are right now dealing withwhat needs to be in legislation this fall."

Bennett said the framework is being co-developed with the rights holders and thatshe hopes consultations will be held in the House of Commons and Senate and completebefore the next federal election.

"We hope to have a document in the next little while that will be about thesuggestions we've heard for the drafting instructions. We then need the feedback on that and hope to be able to get something into the house this fall," she said.

"This is mainly about holding Canada to account, our code of conduct of how we now deal differently with First Nations, Inuit and Mtis."

'Continuous relationship building'

Bennett, Francis and Ramjattanwere inagreementthat Wednesday'sdiscussions were productive.

"We have a minister and a government that we feel really wants to move this agenda forward in a collaborative way," said Francis.

Ramjattansaid "We're not adequately funded, so we want to be able to put our ideas forward in how we feel we want to beSo that they're not dictating to us, how they're going to work with us."

'We set the guidelines around the parameters on all the different areas. That's a better approach then what has been historically done in the past,' says Lennox Island First Nation Chief Matilda Ramjattan. (Brian Higgins/CBC)

"We set the guidelines around the parameters on all the different areas. That's a better approach then what has been historically done in the past."

In terms of next steps, both chiefs said they willregroup on the different areas discussedand then follow up with Bennett.

"It's continuous relationship building," said Ramjattan.

More P.E.I. news

With files from Island Morning, Compass and Jessica Doria-Brown