| Ottawa – Monday February
3, 2003 - Canada’s three National Aboriginal Leaders told an
Ottawa news conference today the Prime Minister and Canada’s
Premiers have let Aboriginal people in Canada down by shutting them
out of this week’s First Minister’s meeting on Health
Reform in Canada.
The Leaders of the Assembly of First Nations, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami,
and the Métis National Council said they have been trying
for two months to participate with the Prime Minister and Premiers
on Health Reform.
AFN National Chief Matthew Coon Come said, “We need to be
there because Aboriginal people in Canada rank at the very bottom
of health care status. We have the highest rates of disease and
the shortest life expectancy of anyone in Canada.”
Jose Kusugak, speaking for Canadian Inuit, said, “For two
months we tried the quiet diplomatic approach, just to represent
our people and in the end we are again dismissed and ignored. Again,
we have to take our case directly to the public.”
MNC Interim President Audrey Poitras added, “In recent years
the Prime Minister has said much about developing a new partnership
with Aboriginal people. How can there be any kind of partnership
on this most basic issue if we are not at the table?”
The leaders said the Prime Minister has failed to show leadership.
In a letter to Mr Chrétien in December, requesting participation
at the First Ministers meeting, the Aboriginal leaders spelled out
clear statistics on the desperate plight of Aboriginal People in
Canada in terms of health care. They also expressed concerns with
the Romanow Report and they made a commitment to contribute and
work with the Prime Minister and Premiers to develop accountable,
effective, and relevant health care delivery in Aboriginal communities
across Canada.
The Prime Minister delegated Health Minister Anne McLellan to meet
with the leaders and report back. That was early January, and as
of today, there has been no formal response from the Prime Minister
from that meeting.
“The Prime Minister has referred the matter to the Provinces
and to us that is unacceptable. Our issues, our voice and our perspective
must be directly represented at the table,” says National
Chief Coon Come. “The Prime Minister has not signalled to
the Aboriginal People that he is serious about closing the gap on
health status for Aboriginal People. He continues to exclude the
Aboriginal leaders from serious discussions that affect us.”
Jose Kusugak added, “It is the federal Government that has
responsibility for Aboriginal health in Canada, but if the Prime
Minister and the Federal Government have their way, eventually we
will become patients of the Provinces and Territories.” Audrey
Poitras, said “We are not going to resolve the Health Care
crisis n our communities by shutting people out right at the very
beginning of national health care reform and renewal.
The three leaders said what they are demanding is not unprecedented.
The Constitutional Act of 1982 recognized the three Aboriginal peoples
of Canada and their rights. Those meetings also set out the principle
of Aboriginal inclusion in future First Minister’s meetings
on matters that directly affected Aboriginal peoples. Health care
is a primary issue and concern for the Métis, First Nations,
and Inuit peoples. The Prime Minister and Premiers must allow time
this week to meet with Aboriginal peoples on these matters and begin
developing the much talked about “partnerships” to begin
addressing them.
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