Post by Okwes on Dec 20, 2005 12:12:55 GMT -5
Billions pledged for Canadian first nation peoples
Issue 95
INTERNATIONAL, Issue 95, 2005: Canada has pledged $C5 billion ($A5.8 billion) in a landmark deal with Aboriginal communities to help lift them from the poverty and disease that has plagued their neglected reserves for more than a century.
The agreement commits federal funding over the next decade for widespread improvements in housing, health care, education and economic development for the nearly one million Aboriginal people of the North American nation, namely Indian tribes known as First Nations and Inuits, the Aboriginal Canadians of the north-eastern and Arctic territories.
Prime Minister Paul Martin and the premiers of Canada’s 13 provinces and territories announced the agreement last month after a two-day summit with five native organisations.
“Aboriginal Canadians have no desire for more rhetoric; they have needs and those needs demand attention. It’s as simple as that. We all know that there are serious problems in too many Aboriginal communities and it’s heartbreaking to hear the stories of lost promise,” Martin said after the conclusion of the two-day summit in Kelowna.
Canada’s native reserves are dramatically short of housing and safe drinking water, their high school graduation rate is just over half the national average, and life expectancy for Indians is five to seven years lower than for non-Aboriginals.
Phil Fontaine, national chief of the Assembly of First nations, praised the agreement and said he would demand that federal officials follow through.
“We will close the gap in the quality of life between our people and other Canadians. That will be our legacy for the coming generations,” he said. “We have conquered our own cynicism. We’ve seen how far we can go in just two days, imagine how far we can go in 10 years.” - AP apm
Issue 95
INTERNATIONAL, Issue 95, 2005: Canada has pledged $C5 billion ($A5.8 billion) in a landmark deal with Aboriginal communities to help lift them from the poverty and disease that has plagued their neglected reserves for more than a century.
The agreement commits federal funding over the next decade for widespread improvements in housing, health care, education and economic development for the nearly one million Aboriginal people of the North American nation, namely Indian tribes known as First Nations and Inuits, the Aboriginal Canadians of the north-eastern and Arctic territories.
Prime Minister Paul Martin and the premiers of Canada’s 13 provinces and territories announced the agreement last month after a two-day summit with five native organisations.
“Aboriginal Canadians have no desire for more rhetoric; they have needs and those needs demand attention. It’s as simple as that. We all know that there are serious problems in too many Aboriginal communities and it’s heartbreaking to hear the stories of lost promise,” Martin said after the conclusion of the two-day summit in Kelowna.
Canada’s native reserves are dramatically short of housing and safe drinking water, their high school graduation rate is just over half the national average, and life expectancy for Indians is five to seven years lower than for non-Aboriginals.
Phil Fontaine, national chief of the Assembly of First nations, praised the agreement and said he would demand that federal officials follow through.
“We will close the gap in the quality of life between our people and other Canadians. That will be our legacy for the coming generations,” he said. “We have conquered our own cynicism. We’ve seen how far we can go in just two days, imagine how far we can go in 10 years.” - AP apm