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February 7, 2003
Aboriginal leaders not
included in health-care conference
Inuit, First Nations
and Métis groups vow to meet with premiers independently
Audrey Poitras,
interim leader of the Métis National Council, Jose Kusugak, president
of ITK, and Matthew Coon Come, head of the Assembly of First Nations, during
a press conference on Monday.
(PHOTO BY STEPHEN HENDRIE/ITK)
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MIRIAM
HILL
Jose Kusugak, president
of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, says Aboriginal leaders should meet independently
with premiers, since they werent able to meet with them as a group during
the first ministers meeting on health care this week.
ITK, the Assembly of First
Nations and the Métis National Council were not included in the meeting,
held Tuesday and Wednesday in Ottawa, despite months of lobbying the Prime Minister
for an invitation.
Kusugak said he "has
no idea" what happened. The leaders sent out letters outlining the reasons
they felt they should be at the conference. They received positive responses
from many of the premiers, but nothing from the office of the prime minister.
Since the federal government
has the sole responsibility for Aboriginal health care, and since there are
such serious issues affecting Aboriginal people, from suicide, to substance
abuse, to cancer, it only makes sense for their leaders to be present at a meeting
where health-care reform will be discussed, Kusugak said.
"The prime minister
talks about closing the gap, and partnerships," Kusugak said. "This
would certainly be one of them, when theres such an imbalance of Arctic
versus southern health care right now."
He said if the prime minister
and premiers have their way, eventually Aboriginal people will become patients
of the provinces and territories. This is not necessarily a bad thing, he admitted,
but the people being discussed should be at the table to have their say.
"There is nothing
wrong with decentralizing those kinds of things, or getting provinces to run
those kinds of things, but I think we need to be there right at the beginning,"
he said.
Kusugak said the Aboriginal
leaders were asking for a couple of hours to present their thoughts on health-care
reform as it relates to their people, not to grandstand or dwell on issues from
the past.
However, he said he doesnt
see the snub as a failure because the Aboriginal organizations were able to
communicate many of their concerns to the country over the past few weeks.
"If anybody failed
its the prime minister," he said.
The Prime Ministers
Office did not respond to a request for comment.
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