Carry the Kettle Nakoda Nation asks court to declare Sask. gov't failed duties in Crown land sales
CBC
Carry the Kettle Nakoda Nation is taking the Ministry of Agriculture to court, claiming the government has failed to consult with the community when selling off Crown lands.
The First Nation community, located about 80 kilometres east of Regina, is one of several that have recently accused the Saskatchewan government of treaty infringements and unauthorized sales of Crown lands in court.
"We are here and we are going to let Saskatchewan know, and all forms of government know, that things like this can't be carried forward," said Brady O'Watch, Carry the Kettle's Chief.
O'Watch said that reserve lands don't expand, and as population grows some community members are forced to leave.
He said it's so difficult to buy lands and transfer them to reserve status that it feels like the province sets them up "to fail."
JFK Law Corporation filed an application for a judicial review on behalf of Carry the Kettle on March 15.
It's seeking declarations that the Ministry of Agriculture has a duty to consult Carry the Kettle about Crown Lands and that it has failed to do so properly for about 40 parcels of land.
The application also asks the court to enforce an order prohibiting the ministry from selling more Crown lands in Carry the Kettle's traditional territory until it consults with Carry the Kettle about the adverse effects on its treaty rights, which the application claims the government has refused to do.
Carry the Kettle claims in its application that the province has authorized its traditional territory, which it relies on to support the Indigenous way of life and culture, to be used for mining, oil and gas development, agriculture and other activities "without due regard for Carry the Kettle's treaty rights."
It says only about 13 per cent of the traditional territory remains for First Nation people, including Carry the Kettle members, to practise their treaty rights.
"Before contact, all this area was ours; right from Medicine Hat right to almost where Brandon, Man., is," O'Watch said. "How can we practise our inherent rights if we have no land to do it?"
He said the government should be notifying First Nation communities when land is becoming available, "because no First Nation is going to say no to land."
"Any land that comes forward is now auctioned off," O'Watch said.
O'Watch's claims haven't been proven in court.
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