Good afternoon.
The Northwest Territory Métis Nation appreciates the opportunity to appear before you today. President Garry Bailey asked me to convey his kind regards.
I'd like to give a brief history of the NWTMN.
We are indigenous Métis with aboriginal rights to lands, resources and governance throughout our traditional territory. We are aboriginal people of the Mackenzie and Athabasca river basins. That includes lands we have traditionally used and occupied in Wood Buffalo National Park and in Thaidene Nëné National Park Reserve. Our ancestors lived on these lands that the Creator provided, and they governed themselves according to our own laws and customs from time before memory.
We are a distinct Métis nation within Canada. We have a right to self-determination. Our rights are protected under section 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982.
In 1900, an adhesion to Treaty 8 was signed with treaty Indians at Fort Resolution. Our Métis ancestors were there, but the Government of Canada failed to deal honourably with Métis rights. This legacy of differential treatment between Métis and treaty Indians continues to this day. We regard it as a matter of fairness, equity and justice that reconciliation and redress for historical wrongs must be addressed through our NWTMN negotiating process.
The NWTMN comprises indigenous Métis members from the Fort Smith Métis Council, the Hay River Métis Government Council and the Fort Resolution Métis Council. Our members comprise a significant portion of the communities of Fort Smith, Hay River, Fort Resolution and Yellowknife.
NWTMN were full participants to the Dene/Métis negotiations from the late 1970s to 1990. When the Dene and Métis leadership did not ratify the final agreement in 1990, some regions pursued regional land claim agreements, with the failed Dene/Métis agreement becoming a template for regional negotiations.
In August 1996, the NWTMN, Canada and the Government of the Northwest Territories signed a framework agreement. An agreement-in-principle was signed in July 2015. Final agreement negotiations are under way. In May 2021, a self-government framework agreement was signed. These negotiations place the NWTMN in the unique position of being the first stand-alone Métis land, resources and self-government agreement in Canada—a modern-day treaty.
The NWTMN has chosen the path of good-faith negotiations on lands, resources and self-government as a means to achieve what we understand to be at the core of the land back principle. [Technical difficulty—Editor] the land back principle has gathered momentum recently in light of article 28 of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which provides indigenous peoples, in part, “the right to redress, by means that can include restitution or, when this is not possible, just, fair and equitable compensation”.
We also note the importance of article 26, which upholds indigenous peoples' right to the lands, territories and resources that they have traditionally owned, occupied or used and the need for states to recognize such lands, territories and resources.
We were encouraged in May 2018 when Parliament passed Bill C-262 to harmonize Canada's laws with the UN declaration. Further, the mandate letter of December 2021 from the Prime Minister to the Minister of Justice and the Attorney General calls for the full implementation of the UN declaration across government. The NWTMN looks forward to Canada honouring the implementation of the declaration in respect to Métis rights.
We will continue to seek creative solutions to address the key outstanding issues for our negotiating process, and we can offer a few points, based on our experience, for the committee's consideration.
Indigenous governments may choose different approaches to resolve fundamental questions of land, resources and governance, and land back is one way of looking at the issues. The NWTMN, having chosen the path of good-faith negotiation, is confident that our decision to negotiate can achieve what the land back issue seeks to achieve: a balance between the Crown's actions in respect of our traditional territory and the rights that indigenous Métis will have recognized and affirmed in the modern treaty.
Resolving the key outstanding issues for negotiations may require Canada to examine any impediments that stand in the way of concluding these critical processes and achieving reconciliation. For example, in our process, we have to deal with different ministries to address land issues: INAC or Parks Canada. Although the Crown, as a matter of law, is indivisible, it does at times operate in silos.
In summary, the resolution of long-standing Métis rights, title and governance remains at the forefront of our approach to engaging with Canada and the Government of the Northwest Territories. The NWTMN has always preferred the path of good-faith negotiations. While the path has not been easy, we are approaching a final agreement. In our view, the modern-day treaty we are seeking will achieve the principles that underpin the land back issue. A Métis government with jurisdictions and authorities over its land and people will provide us with what we need to move forward on the path of reconciliation with Canada.
Thank you, and I would be happy to answer any questions at the appropriate time.