Open letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Re: FIPA – Financial Investment Protection Act
Prime Minister Stephen Harper,
As the First Nation Chief of Serpent River and as an Anishinabek Regional Grand Chief of the Lake Huron Region, I am taking this opportunity to make a set of clear statements and an advisement regarding your government’s Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement. As stated clearly by many First Nation leaders on this issue, Canada is breaching its fiduciary obligation to consult in accordance to Canada’s laws. This is a constitutional imperative. Aboriginal and Treaty Rights are the foundation of Canada’s relationship to Indigenous Peoples in this country – rejecting to meaningfully consult and engage them is an assault on the fabric of this country’s supreme law.
The international community, as you know and have formally recognized, has adopted the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People. There are a clear set of articles in UNDRIP that are intended to prevent the type of unilateral action that your government is taking on a number of major policy matters and legislations. In this case trade policy with other nations; FIPA is not acceptable and conducive to the treaty relationship that this country has with First Nations.
Trade and investment treaties with other countries are a very critical and complex endeavours affecting access to lands and resources. China or any other country cannot and should not legally be granted delegated access to treaty lands that are still under current arrangements with First Nation treaties in this country. Prime Minister, FIPA not only targets the Alberta tar sands development, but major resource development in other provinces becomes subject to the protections that China has to access our territories and push development. First Nations in this country have treaties that are diverse and distinct. A blanket investment law giving access to outside foreign investment is flat out negligent. It appears that the Conservative government is disregarding the principles by which it has stated it stands upon; one of those clearly contradicts your unilateral action – human rights. Further, it should be a clear reminder that earlier this year, during the Crown First Nation Gathering, Davos Switzerland and your visit to China you were talking about economic themes and concepts that should have consistently included First Nation lands and treaty relationships. Prime Minister, it would be injudicious for this government to proceed any further with FIPA.
In a recent War of 1812 Commemoration event, First Nation leaders were invited into Rideau Hall as guests to accept medals and banners – as “allies,” Canada says. We also talked about the “Covenant Chain” that is an integral foundation in the critical legal institution that we call, the “Honour of the Crown.” We further spoke at this event and re-iterated that we must “polish the covenant chain” as it was agreed upon by the Crown and First Nations at the time of the Wampum Treaties. Prime Minister Harper, with all due respect, you are again refusing to uphold Canada’s legal duty to consult First Nations. Incursion on First Nation treaty lands and territories trade treaties with other countries will not be acceptable the Crown’s treaty partners in this country and should sharply be contested from the grassroots level to the international arena.
As a First Nation member and signatory Chief of the Robinson Huron Treaty of 1850, I must firmly oppose FIPA. Further I unequivocally request that you cease advancement of this agreement, as it not only jeopardizes Canada and the provinces, it clearly contravenes existing treaty relationships with the First People in this country.
Sincerely,
Chief Isadore Day, Wiindawtegowinini, Serpent River First Nation
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