September 15th 2020
The Indigenous Education Network wishes to assert our uncompromising solidarity with and support for Indigenous land defenders at the听听reclamation site on Six Nations territory outside of Caledonia, Ontario.
We are outraged to learn of the September 2nd, 2020 arrest of our colleague, Courtney Skye, a听, who now faces criminal charges after bringing soup to the land defenders and joining them for lunch at the site. Skye is Mohawk, Turtle Clan, from Six Nations of the Grand River Territory. She studies and writes about Indigenous sovereignty, and injunctions and land claims, and also works as a commentator for CBC. Indigenous journalist听听from Oneida Nation of the Thames, has also been arrested and charged following several days at the reclamation site covering the resistance. In total there have been 26 arrests based on an injunction granted to Foxgate Developments, and听, 15 of these arrests have occurred off-site at people鈥檚 homes and workplaces. As Skye asserts,
People who are supporting the action are being criminalized. People who are making sure the land defenders are fed, that they are warm, that they are getting supplies, they are being criminalized. It’s really alarming [鈥 Cutting off Indigenous people’s supplies to starve them off the land, it’s genocide, it’s colonialism. 鈥
Since July 19th, a group of Six Nations Land Defenders have reclaimed and resided upon land in unceded Haudenosaunee territory near Caledonia, Ontario. They have set up camp on a site slated for the McKenzie Meadows housing development, renaming the site 1492 Land Back Lane.
As Six Nations community member听听explains, 鈥渨hat needs to be understood is that this is a historical land claim going back a couple of hundred years that has not been addressed.鈥 Jacobs, who is a lawyer, law professor and the Associate Dean at Windsor law school, explains that Canada has not been able to produce title to the land and negotiations have failed: 鈥淲e never gave up title to those lands and territories, and in fact Canada owes us money for those lands and resources. The issue is with Canada.鈥澨 The current situation at 1492 Land Back Lane is part of a long-standing struggle to defend land rights of Six Nations of the Grand River and to address unresolved land claims to the area known as the听. In 2006, Six Nations Land Defenders similarly protected this land from development of the Douglas Creek Estates subdivision.
The 1492 Land Back Lane reclamation site is an example of Indigenous peoples鈥擨ndigenous women and youth in particular鈥攑rotecting the land and sovereignty of the Haudenosaunee people.听, 鈥淲hat they鈥檙e doing is according to Haudenosaunee law in being land protectors. They鈥檙e following our rule of law.鈥
In response, Foxgate Developments has secured federal injunctions criminalizing land defense by prohibiting anyone from being on the site or setting up road blockades. This is part of a centuries-old colonial state practice of using Canadian law to dispossess Indigenous peoples of their land. As Yellowhead Institute听, out of 100 cases of injunctions they studied, 76 percent those filed against First Nations by corporations were granted, while 81 per cent of injunctions filed against corporations by First Nations were denied and 82 per cent of injunctions filed against the government by First Nations were denied. 鈥淭his means that 4 times out of 5, the courts side with corporations and government rather than Indigenous claimants on land use cases.鈥澨
From the lands of the听听to Six Nations, from听听to Elsipogtog, attempts to prevent听听from fulfilling their responsibilities as caretakers and stewards of the land must be opposed;听听deny Indigenous peoples their inherent right to their land and to authorize police violence against Indigenous peoples must be opposed. We must condemn and take actions in opposition to such ongoing uses and abuses of Canadian law in ongoing attempts to听.
We join our听听in condemning the arrests and calling on the Attorney-General of Ontario to drop all charges against Courtney Skye and others arrested in relation to land defense on September 2nd. We amplify their calls for the 鈥淧rovince of Ontario to develop policy prohibiting the use of injunctions on Indigenous people in cases of disputes over land use,鈥 and for the 鈥淔ederal Government to engage with the volumes of evidence on criminal justice reform and Land Back.鈥
Signed,
Dr. rosalind hampton, IEN Faculty Co-Chair
Dr. Jeffrey Ansloos, IEN Faculty Co-Chair
Kayla Webber, IEN Student Co-Chair
Julie Blair, IEN Coordinator
Lindsay DuPr茅, 91爆料 Indigenous Education Liaison
听