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April 1 Souvenir Edition
October 22, 1975
The Yellowknife-based
territorial government, the federal government, and most non-aboriginal
residents of the western NWT reacted with fear and hostility
to Dene and Inuit proposals for self-government. Some aboriginal
territorial councilors as
MLAs were then called tried to bridge the vast gulf that separated
the two positions.
Statement: "Political
development in the North"
Nunatsiaq News
IQALUIT This statement
is intended to clarify the position of the undersigned Territorial Councillors
on matters concerning political development in the Northwest Territories. We
feel that it is our duty to offer some leadership to the people who elected
us so that they, the people, can play their proper role in determining their
own political future.
The statement made by the
Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs in Yellowknife on September 18, and
the debate in the Territorial Council on September 29, both illustrate what
is the great problem facing the people of the Northwest Territories. It is that
there is no clear recognition that the Inuit, the Dene, Indians and Metis, have
the right to political self-determination. This is the crux of the matter.
The Inuit and Dene, throught
their Brotherhoods, have made the claim that they have a right to a homeland
of their own in which they are free to develop the political institutions which
will ensure their cultural survival. It is essentially the same claim French-speaking
Canadians make for themselves in Quebec and English-speaking Canadians make
in the other Provinces of Canada. This claim for equality in political self-determination
is based firmly on the indisputable fact that the Inuit and the Dene are the
aboriginals the first citizens of the land they claim as their homeland
and to this day they constitute the great majority of the people of the Northwest
Territories.
Only the Inuit and the
Dene have no other place to go but their homeland in the Northwest Territories.
All others could, if they chose, feel "at home" in English or French
communities either in Canada or elsewhere. The great majority of non-native
peoples do not expect to end their days in the Northwest Territories, but nearly
all Inuit and Dene do. It seems to us therefore, that our native right to political
self-determination should be beyond question for all just and reasonable men.
It is our firm belief that
the people of Canada accept the principle that we have put forward. But we do
not feel satisfied that the spokesmen of the Federal or Territorial Governments
or the non-native members of the Territorial Council are acting on the principle.
We do not want to "negotiate" the principle itself.
We want to hear the Minister
of Indian and Northern Affairs, and Northern residents like the Territorial
Councillors for Yellowknife and Hay River say categorically: "We hold it
as a matter of principle that the Inuit and Dene people of the Northwest Territories
have the right, within Canada's constitution, to political self-determination
within their homelands."
The paper of "Political
Development" discussed in Territorial Council does not state this principle.
The Minister did not state this principle. Indeed the only firm statement we
have is that the present Governments (Federal and Territorial) are the only
ones that will be recognized. Are we to understand from this that the future
of the Inuit and the Dene has already been settled? That the Federal Government
has already decided that the future of the Northwest Territories is that it
will eventually become a single Province just like all the others and it is
only a matter of deciding when to transfer Provincial powers to Territorial
jurisdiction? If this is so, it is not surprising that the Council members largely
representing Canadians of Southern origin should be eager to press for more
power now. For they are seeking more of what they know and understand well.
But as Councillor James Wah-Shee of Great Slave Riding said in the Council
debate - "What would there be left for the native people to negotiate about
if all the powers of a Provincial Government were transferred now to the Territorial
Government?"
We did not vote against
the "Political Development" proposal in Council. We gave once more
an indication of our sincere desire to negotiate the future upon the basis of
the principle we have outlined above. We voted to defer a decision upon the
proposal until we have had a chance to to discuss with the people and
not merely the native people to look carefully at the proposal and at
other proposals for political development in the Northwest Territories and to
let us know their views. We hope that groups and individuals within the Territories
will write letters to us or invite us to discussions upon the matter. We think
it is high time that the people of the Northwest Territories "got into
the act".
Signed by:
Ludy Pudluk, Member High
Arctic
Peter Ernerk, Member Keewatin
James Wah-Shee, Member Great Slave Lake
Mark Evaluarjuk, Member Foxe Basin
Ipeelee Kilabuk, Member Central Baffin
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