ID: |
HARP-273 |
Title: |
Canada: “Time is wasting: Respect for the land rights of the Lubicon Cree long overdue |
Source: |
Amnesty International, AI INDEX: AMR 20/001/2003 1 April 2003 http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGAMR200012003?open&of=ENG-CAN |
Parties: |
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Dispute Resolution Organ: |
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Year: |
2003 |
Pages: |
0 |
Author(s): |
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Keywords: |
Canada, culture, human rights, treaty, treaties, Alberta, civil and political rights, indigenous people, minority rights, self-determination |
Abstract: |
The Lubicon Cree have seen the land on which they depend transformed by logging and large-scale oil and gas extraction. The Lubicon, an Indigenous nation of approximately 500 people living in northern Alberta, have never surrendered their rights to their traditional lands. The Lubicon were simply overlooked when a treaty was negotiated with other Indigenous peoples in the region in 1899. A reserve promised to them forty years later was never established. Since the mid-1980s, negotiations with the federal and provincial governments around land rights have repeatedly broken down. Meanwhile, the Lubicon say that their health, their way of life and their culture itself are being steadily destroyed by resource extraction to which they have never consented. |
Secured: |
False |
Download Article: |
Available here |
Keywords: Alberta, Canada, civil and political rights, culture, human rights, indigenous people, minority rights, self-determination, treaty