Judge questions First Nations' right to challenge Ontario Mtis self government - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:25 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Indigenous

Judge questions First Nations' right to challenge Ontario Mtis self government

A Federal Court judge had some tough questions Wednesday for lawyers representing six eastern Ontario First Nations challenging the Mtis Nation of Ontarios self-government agreement. Where does your client get the authority? asked Associate Judge Benoit Duchesne

'Where does your client get the authority?' judge asks lawyers for First Nations group

A man speaks at a podium with Parliament Hill's Centre Block in the background.
Jason Batise, executive director of the Wabun Tribal Council, speaks out against the Mtis Nation of Ontario self-government agreement at a protest in Ottawa in June. (Brett Forester/CBC)

A Federal Court judge had some tough questions for lawyers representing sixFirst Nations challenging an Ontario Mtisself-government agreement Wednesday in Toronto.

The Wabun Tribal Council in eastern Ontario alleges the Canadian government's decision to sign the deal with the Mtis Nation of Ontario (MNO) encourages dubious claims to lands wherethe Mtis have little or no historic ties.

But the MNO says the council'scaseis "doomed," and tribal council lawyer Corey Shefman found himself in the hot seatearly on day two of a hearing over whether it should be thrown out of court.

"Where does your client get the authority to determine who is Mtis and who isn't?" asked Associate Judge Benoit Duchesne, adding pointedly:"That's a problem."

The First Nations applied for judicial review against Canada in March, but the MNO soon joined the case and promptly filed a motion to have itdismissed. Lawyers for theMNOand Ottawa argued their position Tuesday.

Among other things, they said the First Nations have no right to attack the deal because it concerns only internal governance, excludes land, and doesn't impact them at all.

But,Shefman countered,First Nations with thousands of years of occupation behind them have every right to demand the Canadian government verify those it recognizes are truly Indigenous to the lands they claim.

"Canada can't wave a magic wand and simply deem people with no historical connection to a particular place to be Indigenous to that place," said Shefman, with Indigenous-focused law firm Olthuis Kleer Townshend.

A map of First Nations territory stretching from close to Lake Superior to the Ontario-Quebec Border.
A map showing the boundaries of the Wabun Tribal Council traditional territory and member First Nations. (Wabun Tribal Council)

The Wabun Tribal Council consists of Matachewan, Brunswick House, Chapleau Ojibwe, Flying Post, Mattagami and BeaverhouseFirst Nations.

Their traditional territorycomprisesan area of Treaty 9roughly the size of France. Itoverlaps with claimed Mtis territory, the Abitibi Inland Mtis Homeland, which the Ontario government recognized along with five others in 2017.

Shefman said the MNO is incorrectly trying to portraythe case as an attack on the foundation of Mtis nationhood. He emphasized the First Nations acceptthe existence ofMtis rights and blamed the conflict on colonial tactics aimed at sowing division.

"For too long the Crown has played divide and conquer between Indigenous peoples, and it's extremely unfortunate that we've been put in this situation by the Crown," he said."Our clients have been forced to, as they perceive it, protect their rights."

Argument 'defies logic'

The exchange set the tone fora day of back-and-forth between the tribal council's attorneys and Duchesne, the judge.

On Tuesday, MNO lawyer Jason Madden said elements of the First Nations' arguments such as likeningthe MNOto Ottawa's "Rockcliffe Lawn Tennis Club" sports association in a court filing were insulting.

"It defies logic" for First Nations to question the existence of Mtis in Ontario, he said, citingthe Supreme Court of Canada's 2003 Powley ruling, which affirmedMtis hunting rights in and around Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.

Madden's core argument however was thatthe court has no jurisdiction to review the deal because it forms part of the legislative process.Bill C-53, which Ontario First Nations vigorously oppose, would ratify the MNO deal and otherssigned with Mtis associations in Alberta and Saskatchewan.

Justice Canada lawyer Dan Luxat, representing the minister of Crown-Indigenous relations, told the courtthe agreementexpressly excludes land and harvesting rights issues for another day.

Eastern communities contentious

The legitimacy of some MNO communities, particularly in the east, is hotly contested. The Manitoba Mtis Federation rejects the 2017 MNO communities.

The federation cut ties with the Mtis National Council in 2021, alleging the Ontario group was sponsoring a pan-Indigenous "eastern invasion." Earlier this year, theMNO voted to oust 5,000 members who couldn't prove a connection to an MNO community.

Taking over from Shefman in the afternoon court session, lawyer Krista Nerland argued a duty to consult was triggered and ignored, but the judgepushed back, saying alleged negative impacts to First Nations rights were purely speculative.

A map of the Mtis Nation homeland.
The map detailing the Metis homeland was adopted by the Mtis National Council in 2018, but it excludes the Sault Ste. Marie community and others the Mtis Nation of Ontario recognizes. (Manitoba Mtis Federation)

Nerlandarguedthe deal, which commits the parties to reaching a treaty in two years, provides ammunition for some MNO communities to assert land rights they may not have. The First Nations must voice concerns now, not later, she said.

"The First Nations have a genuine interest in what happens in their territory and who's recognized there, rooted in their deep connection to those lands and their own Anishinaabe law," Nerland toldDuchesne.

Despite hisinsistent probing, the judgenoted he hadn't decided anything yet.

Duchesne said he hoped to render his decision on whether the case can proceed, and if sohow,by September.