Suspect in Caledonia beating surrenders to police

September 27, 2007

Hamilton Spectator

One of three suspects wanted in the beating of a Caledonia developer surrendered to Ontario Provincial Police today.

The 15-year-old boy faces charges of assault, break-and-enter and uttering threats. He is to appear in Cayuga court Friday morning for a bail hearing.

He and two others were sought in the Sept. 13 confrontation that sent builder Sam Gualtieri to hospital with head injuries. He was hurt when he and three others confronted a group of natives in a home he was building on the Stirling Woods subdivision in Caledonia.

Native protesters occupied the subdivision to press their land claim for property they say was wrongly taken from them.

The Six Nations Confederacy subsequently said the occupation was unauthorized and police arrested several occupiers who refused to leave the site.

An OPP investigation led to the identification of three persons in connection with the Gualtieri attack and issued three arrest warrants.

Anyone with information about the two remaining suspects is asked to call the Haldimand County OPP at 905-772-3322 or Crime stoppers at 1-800-222-tips (8477).


Native land ownership is the issue, not development

September 27, 2007

The Hamilton Spectator

(Sep 27, 2007)Re: ‘Are native protesters looking only for new buildings?’ (Letters, Sept. 19)

Unfortunately, the media does not generally report on native matters. The public is usually only informed of these long, ongoing land negotiations when it becomes necessary for us to halt industry, business or development to protect our land rights.

Waiting until the last possible moment is not a method to acquire partially-developed properties, as suggested.

The protests, paperwork, standing in line for a chance to be heard and a chance at negotiations have been going on for years but are seldom reported on, thus you may not be aware of them. We wait until the last minute in faith to be heard fairly and not to have our land under negotiation developed, mined or hauled away without our consultation, consideration and — most often — without even our knowledge.

Only when it becomes apparent that we will not be heard through “legal” channels do we have to resort to reclamation before our land is sold off in chunks.

I don’t believe the Haudenosaunee people are insisting development be stopped forever more.

The issue is the ownership/jurisdiction of the land itself, not the development.

The formation of the Haudenosaunee Development Institute suggests this, and appears to be a practical body to approach for consultation prior to any venture in the Haldimand Tract.

Courtesy of www.CaledoniaWakeupCall.com


Alexco reaches pact with Yukon First Nation

September 27, 2007

Alexco Resource Corp. and the Na-Cho Nyak Dun First Nation in Mayo, Yukon, have worked out a deal that will see both sides resuming talks on the mining company’s plans.

Alexco vice-president Rob McIntyre told CBC News that the agreement will make the First Nation more of a partner in its mining plans, as well as bring talks on its project in the Elsa area back on track.

“We did pull our chairs up to the table and roll our sleeves up and worked out a great agreement here that will provide a clear path forward and some project certainty for us,” McIntyre said Tuesday.

“So that’s what we have been looking for and that is what the Na-Cho Nyak Dun has been looking for as well.”

On Aug. 17, the Na-Cho Nyak Dun threatened to boycott government talks with Alexco on the reclamation of the United Keno Hill silver mine site, located 330 kilometres north of Whitehorse. The site is on federal land that is part of the First Nation’s traditional territory.

read the full story here


Ignoring Caledonia will not make things right

September 27, 2007

Well, what do you know? Until this week, it seemed we were going to get through four weeks of intensive political campaigning for the Oct. 10 election and not a single word would cross the lips of the assorted party leaders about an issue which continues to infuriate most Ontarians – the illegal Native occupation at Caledonia.

It would have been a natural for last week’s televised leadership debate. If nothing else, Premier Dalton McGuinty, who has mimicked the head-inthe sand ostrich since the protest began in April 2006, at least would have been forced to say something.

But, alas, no such luck. It didn’t even come up. And neither Conservative Leader John Tory or NDP Leader Howard Hampton mentioned it either. But now, to his credit, Tory has gone to Caledonia and announced that if he becomes premier – a concept not nearly as far-fetched as it was not long ago – protesters engaged in illegal occupations would face daily fines of $2,000 and organizations supporting them would face daily fines of $25,000.

So what’s the Liberal response to this? Well Health Minister George Smitherman, the party’s designated attack dog – who, like McGuinty, to his shame has never even visited Caledonia during all this time – attacked Tory for “fanning the flames” and being “willing to jeopardize a fragile peace for his own personal gain.”

Oh please. These are the same Liberals who shamelessly exploited the tragic 1995 shooting death of protester Dudley George at Ipperwash Provincial Park, even going so far as to personally blaming then premier Mike Harris – contrary to the evidence – of being directly responsible for the Ontario Provincial Police shooting.

Talk about chutzpah! But even beyond that, just what “fragile peace” is Smitherman talking about anyway?

Perhaps if he or McGuinty were responsible enough to actually talk to the innocent victims of this ongoing occupation, they may discover that life has been a living hell for the people of Caledonia and – to their shame – the OPP have allowed it to happen. He should ask married Caledonia couple, David Brown and Dana Chatwell, if their lives have been peaceful while the Liberals and the OPP blithely look the other way, apparently hoping that if they don’t look it’s not really happening.

Read the full story here


Legal hammers, human nails

September 27, 2007

At Caledonia, Six Nations Mohawks have occupied the site of a planned development for more than 18 months, claiming they never surrendered the lands in dispute. Parts of Caledonia are now blocked off and development in the contested area is frozen.

For the most part, Caledonia townspeople do not support the blockade. They are greatly inconvenienced and may not appreciate the Mohawk frustration at seeing reserved lands repeatedly developed over their objections or understand that the Mohawk claim has been outstanding for more than 100 years.

But as time drags on with no resolution, events have taken an ugly turn. Last week, a developer who tried to go behind the lines to check on his property was beaten viciously by native thugs. Iroquois traditionalists at the blockade say they don’t condone the violence and had nothing to do with it, but have clearly been unable to control extremists on the line.

Just this week, Dave Brown and Dana Chatwell, a couple whose home is trapped between the blockade, sued the OPP and Ontario for more than $70 million in damages, claiming regular harassment by natives who pound on their windows and demand they present native-issued “passports” before entering their own land.

John Tory is now calling on the police to remove the protesters. He also wants changes to the Petty Trespass Act, making it illegal for any organization or third party to support or encourage a blockade.

But consider this. At Sharbot Lake, the Algonquins have blocked access to an area where Frontenac Ventures Company planned to build a uranium mine. Like the Mohawks, the Algonquins have refused to abide by a court injunction, instead demanding negotiations.

Another lawsuit for lost income is pending – Frontenac Ventures has sued the First Nations and Ontario for $77 million. But the tone of the blockade at Sharbot Lake is very different from that at Caledonia – here, the Algonquins have widespread support.

Read the full story here


Band won’t back down

September 27, 2007

As critics accused the province of failing to enforce the law to end a nearly two-week blockade near Hollow Water First Nation, a cabinet minister confirmed there’s no end in sight for the conflict.

Hollow Water band members erected their first set of barriers on two access roads Sept. 14 to protest cottage development on what they consider traditional reserve lands.

Barricades were added at Rice River Road and Beaver Creek Road on Sept. 21 in and around the community, about 190 km northeast of Winnipeg.

“The barricades are illegal,” said Tory justice critic Gerald Hawranik during question period yesterday. “Is (the minister) prepared to respect an illegal act or will he do his duty as the minister of justice and enforce that law.”

Justice Minister Dave Chomiak said he will leave that decision up to the police.

read the full story here


Candidates spar over Caledonia

September 27, 2007

Sept. 27, 2007
Brantford Expositor

Brant riding candidates in the Oct. 10 provincial election went at each other with new gusto Wednesday evening in a debate hosted by the Chamber of Commerce Brantford-Brant.

Lined up in front of about 50 business people and political supporters at the Brantford Golf and Country Club, Liberal Dave Levac, Conservative Dan McCreary, New Democrat Brian Van Tilborg, Green Party candidate Ted Shelegy and Rob Ferguson of the Family Coalition Party sparred more sharply than in earlier encounters.

Independent candidate John Turmel was barred from participating.

The five participants traded barbs and accusations over the behaviour of the OPP and the Ontario government surrounding native land disputes, manufacturing plant closures and job losses. They also sparred over high property taxes and extending public funding to faith-based schools.

The handling of the Caledonia occupation and native land claims kept recurring throughout the two-hour debate.

McCreary said the McGuinty government “hasn’t done a blessed thing” since the Caledonia occupation began 18 months ago.

He suggested the OPP were not doing all they could because they were being given signals not to from sources he didn’t name.

Referring to the one year he spent on the city’s police services board, McCreary said he believes something might have been going on, but didn’t elaborate.

He also said he would like to have the handling of the dispute for the past 18 months investigated.

Levac defended what he considered a thoughtful, careful handling of deep-seated issues, and urged listeners not to listen to PC Leader John Tory’s rule-of-law speeches and conclude that the police and the government are not doing anything.

Read the full story here