Authority of governments over Indigenous hunting and fishing questioned at North Bay trial - Action News
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Authority of governments over Indigenous hunting and fishing questioned at North Bay trial

A trial underway in North Bay this week could have far reaching implications for the Indigenous people of northern Ontario and across Canada. The defence is arguing that no governments, not even First Nation chiefs and councils, can legally control hunting and fishing around Lake Nipissing.

54 people from around Lake Nipissing are on trial for hunting and fishing violations

Lake Nipissing commercial fisherman Lorne Stevens holds up the fin of a pickerel. He is part of a group claiming Nipissing First Nation does not have the legal authority to infringe on their Indigenous rights. (Erik White/CBC)

A trial underway this week could have far reaching implications for the Indigenous people of northern Ontario and across Canada.

The defence is arguing that no governments, not even First Nation chiefs and councils, can legally control hunting and fishing around Lake Nipissing.

There are 54 people on trialin a virtual courtroom based in North Bay, charged with violating Ontario's hunting and fishing laws, as well as the commercial fishing laws of Nipissing First Nation.

They all admit to doing what they're accused of.

But their lawyer Michael Swinwood arguedthe governments laying those charges have no authority to do so.

Lawyer Michael Swinwood speaks to reporters outside the Moncton courthouse in 2019. (Shane Magee/CBC)

He saidthe Robinson Huron Treaty of 1850 was signed by Potawatomipeople from the United States who didn't actuallyrepresent the Indigenous communities ofLake Nipissing.

"We intend to show that there is no such thing as an Indian. It doesn't exist," Swinwood told the court Monday.

HesaidNipissing First Nation is a colonial creation of the federal government and its Indian Act and that the people who lived around the lake at the time of the treaty signingwere part of the largelyforgotten Amikwa Algonquin Nation, which extended from Lake Superior to the Atlantic coast.

Swinwood argues Lake Nipissingand the land that surrounds it were never surrendered to the Canadian government, so it does not have the power to control who hunts and fishes there.

"A chief and band council only has authority under the Indian Act in relation to the reserve...they have no authority over Lake Nipissing," he told the court.

After decades of conflict, Nipissing First Nation has been working with the Ministry of Natural Resources in recent years, including on investigating possible violations to the First Nation's fishing law. (Erik White/CBC)

Swinwood saidhe is making similar arguments in defending a man from Henvey Inlet First Nation south of Sudbury who is charged with operating an illegal cannabis dispensary.

Paul Gonsalves, the prosecutor for the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry, told the court thatthese 54 defendants for years have been enjoying the benefits of the treaty they now claim is worthless.

Eight of the defendants are commercial fishermen from Lake Nipissing and the remaining 46 were charged over the last 15 years with various hunting and fishing violationsin the general area between Sturgeon Falls and Mattawa.

Gonsalves said even if the court accepts the defence's argument about the rights of the Amikwa nation, some of the charges, including shooting a gun across a road and making false statements to a conservation officer, would still stand.

There are also 46 defendants facing hunting and fishing charges from the last 15 years in the area around Lake Nipissing. They claim they are members of the Amika Algonquin nation, which never ceded or surrendered its land to the Canadian government. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

On the first day of the trial, district Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry manager Mitch Goodwin testified on how after decades of conflict over fishing on Lake Nipissing,the province and the First Nation reached an agreement in 2016.

Under that memorandum of understanding, provincial conservation officers nowhelp the First Nation enforce its fishing law, including restrictions on commercial fishing.

Nipissing First Nation Chief Scott McLeod also took the stand, saying the fishery lawwas approved in a plebiscite in his community in 2005 and has seen the pickerel population rebound in recent years.

"We've gone from people getting used to our law to just a standard practice," McLeod said.

But Swinwoodquestioned that law, which states that the people of Nipissing First Nation have been fishing the lake "since time immemorial" even though the First Nation was created under the Indian Act in the late 1800s.

"Us as a nation has always been in existence, it might not have been called 'Nipissing First Nation' but we were a nation of people," McLeod replied.

Swinwoodasked the chief several questions about his community's history, which McLeod said he wasn't an expert in, but agreed with the lawyer that they have always been "part of a larger Algonquin Nation."

Scott McLeod is the chief of Nipissing First Nation (Erik White/CBC)

"As a community we have oral history and we've always been part of the land here around Lake Nipissing and that's stronger than any research," McLeod said.

Swinwood also asked McLeod several questions about where his authority as chief comes from, suggesting the First Nation and it's recently passed constitution or "ChiNaaknigewin" is wholly governed by the federal government and the Indian Act.

McLeodagreed that his community's inherent Indigenous rights are "covered by Canadian legislation" but that "thebigger part of where we get our authority is from our own people."

He did agree with Swinwood though that how his community is governed now is likely different from how it was done traditionally before colonization.

The trial continues this week and in the coming weeksis expected to hear from experts on Indigenous history.