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Indigenous

Indigenous leaders adopt declaration condemning identity theft

First Nations, Inuit and Red River Mtis leaders unanimously adopted a formal declaration condemning Indigenous identity fraud, capping Day 2 of what they're calling a historic summit in Winnipeg.

Delegates also adopt resolution denouncing disputed Inuit identity claims of NunatuKavut in Labrador

A man with glasses speaks at a news conference.
Johannes Lampe, president of Nunatsiavut, speaks during a news conference in Ottawa in November 2023. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

First Nations, Inuit and Red River Mtis leadersunanimously adopted what they're calling a historic declaration condemning Indigenous identity theftWednesday afternoon in Winnipeg.

Delegates from OntarioFirst Nations, northern Labrador Inuitand Manitoba Mtis carried the resolution by consensus, capping the two-day Indigenous Identity Fraud Summit at the Fort Garry Hotel.

The declaration demands, among other things, that federal and provincial governments "cease their actions accommodating these identity thieves" and co-operate with legitimate nations to correct the "egregious affront" to their peoples.

"We condemn in the strongest terms those who engage in Indigenous identity fraud, whether for financial gain, academic recognition or any other purpose," the declaration says.

"Such actions are unacceptable and contribute to the ongoing marginalization of authentic First Nation, Inuit and Red River Mtis voices and experiences."

Co-hosts Chiefs of Ontario (COO),representing 133 First Nations in Ontario, and the Manitoba Mtis Federation (MMF) hailedthe declaration and said it pavesthe way for greater organizing, political pressure and action.

Glen Hare, Ontario regional chief elected byCOO, was moved to tears after it was adopted, as he spoke of the centuries of hardship suffered by First Nations people, particularly children.

Two men, one in a First Nations ribbon shirt the other in a Mtis beaded vest, pose for a picture.
Ontario Regional Chief Glen Hare, left, with Manitoba Mtis Federation President David Chartrand in Winnipeg on May 14, 2024. (Corentin Mittet-Magnan/Radio-Canada)

Hestood with MMF President David Chartrandand Johannes Lampe, president of Nunatsiavut Government, the self-governing authority innorthern Labrador, in a show of unity.

Hare said at a newsconference later,"This summit has demonstrated our nations are committed to wholeheartedly addressing this matter with the urgency it deserves."

Ogimaa Shelly Moore-Frappier of Temagami First Nation said,"We really have to think about what the impacts have been on us.

"We have had to fight hard to be in theseinstitutions... then we have people who come in and learn a hand drum song and go running with it."

Resolution on NunatuKavut

The summit earlier on Wednesday adopted a resolution denouncing the disputed Inuit identity claims ofNunatuKavut Community Council (NCC).

The council, formerlythe Labrador Mtis Association and the Labrador Mtis Nation, represents 6,000 self-identifying Inuit in south and central Labrador.

Lampe told the delegates that Inuit stand united in the conviction the group is non-Indigenous.

"Accepting false claims undermines what we've fought so hard to achieve," he said.

"Recognizing a settler group in Labrador as Indigenous is harmful and disrespectful and wrong. This is not reconciliation."

In 2019, the federal government signed a memorandum of understanding recognizing NunatuKavut as an "Indigenous collective" capable of holding Indigenous rights.

Innu Nation, representing the Labrador First Nations communities of Sheshatshiu and Natuashish, has filed a court challenge against the agreement.

"Many of the stories they tell are stolen," Innu Nation Grand Chief Simon Pokue said of NCC in a speech to the delegates.

He accused NCC of being a race-shifting organization that operates from a position of privilege. By recognizing and funding it, Canada is perpetuating "economic violence" and recolonization against Innu, he said.

"If the government of Canada can water down the rights of true Indigenous people, then we will cease to exist as distinct," he said.

"Perhaps the government's goal is to make everyone Indigenous, so that no one is. They will not make us white. They could make white people Indigenous."

That sentiment was a recurring one through the presentations. Chartrandpledged Lampe and Pokue his full support on behalf of the Red River Mtis.

"These people are shifting their positions as fast as you can change your socks," Chartrand said.

"Today if they lose the Inuit argument, what are they next? A First Nation?"

NunatuKavut responds

Todd Russell, NunatuKavut president, said in a phone interviewthat what is shifting is not NCC's positions but the political posture of those in the room.

"This meeting is nothing but a bunch of disgruntled groups who're trying to suppress the rights and interests of other Indigenous people, in our case the Inuit of NunatuKavut," he said.

A bald man stands at a podium. He's wearing an orange t-shirt along with a pin of an orange shirt over his heart.
NunatuKavut Community Council President Todd Russell says he doesn't give credence to the meeting. (Jon Gaudi/CBC)

Russell called the resolution ludicrous and said he couldn't care less about it but he did acknowledge he is concerned about the pressure from MMF, COO, NunatsiavutGovernmentand Innu Nation influencing federal decisions.

"It's concerning, yes," he said.

"But do I give any credence to the meeting? No. Do I give any credence to the resolutions? Absolutely not."

He said nothing will deter NCC from representing its people and fighting for their rights.

Day 1 of the summit largely focused on theMtis Nation of Ontario (MNO), whose claims of a historic Mtis presence throughout the province COO and MMF reject. The summit passed a resolution Tuesday denouncing MNO.

In a statement, MNO accused MMF of using the summit to "distort the truth about Mtis Nation history and identity, and to further the MMF's political agenda," by rebranding the entire Mtis Nation as the Red River Mtis.

"This continued pattern of revisionist history, without providing any opportunity for face-to-face conversation with Mtis Nation governments, is entirely unproductive, dangerous, and must not be allowed to continue,"thestatement read.

The Indigenous Peoples Alliance of Manitoba, affiliated with the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples which is also affiliated with NunatuKavut echoed the other groups' reactions.

MMF "have been regularly changing the definition of who qualifies to be a Mtis person since their withdrawal from the Mtis National Council in September 2021," the alliance said in a Wednesday news release.