[IPSM] Canada ranked low in UN native report
Macdonald Stainsby
mstainsby at resist.ca
Tue Apr 12 08:22:27 PDT 2005
"Economic, social and human indicators of well-being, quality of life and
development are completely lower among aboriginal people than other
Canadians," said Stavenhagen, who also warns the housing, health and suicide
situation is reaching crisis proportions.
He said the condition of aboriginal people in the country was "the most
pressing human rights issue facing Canada."
Canada ranked low in UN native report
Last Updated Mon, 11 Apr 2005 19:33:32
http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2005/04/11/UNNatives-050411
GENEVA - Canada's high ranking on the United Nations' human development
scale would dramatically drop if the country were judged solely on the
economic and social well-being of its First Nations people.
According to a new UN report, Canada would be placed 48th out of 174
countries if judged on those criteria.
The low position is a significant drop from Canada's usual top 10 ranking on
the UN's human development scale. Canada came in seventh in the last report
but if the conditions of native people were the only qualifiers, the
country's ranking would plummet.
"Poverty, infant mortality, unemployment, morbidity, suicide, criminal
detention, children on welfare, women victims of abuse, child prostitution,
are all much higher among aboriginal people than in any other sector of
Canadian society," said the report issued by the UN Human Rights Commission.
UN special investigator Rodolfo Stavenhagen researched the plight of
Canada's indigenous peoples on a visit to the country from May 21 to June 4,
2004, at the invitation of the Canadian government. Stavenhagen pored over
statistics and commission reports, and spoke with Inuit leaders.
"Economic, social and human indicators of well-being, quality of life and
development are completely lower among aboriginal people than other
Canadians," said Stavenhagen, who also warns the housing, health and suicide
situation is reaching crisis proportions.
He said the condition of aboriginal people in the country was "the most
pressing human rights issue facing Canada."
Among the problems highlighted in the report:
a.. Poverty affects 60 per cent of aboriginal children.
b.. The annual income of aboriginal people is "significantly lower" than
other Canadians.
c.. Unemployment is very high among aboriginals.
d.. 20 per cent of aboriginal people have inadequate water and sewer systems.
e.. Aboriginals make up 4.4 per cent of the Canadian population but
account for 17 per cent of the people in prison.
f.. Cases of tuberculosis are six times higher than the rest of Canada.
g.. Life expectancy among the Inuit is 10 years lower than the rest of Canada.
Paul Meyer, Canada's ambassador to the UN in Geneva, agrees the health of
native people in Canada is "a matter of serious concern." He referred to the
recently launched Canada-Aboriginal Peoples Roundtable as the focus of
efforts to improve the lives of First Nations people.
Written by CBC News Online staff
--
Macdonald Stainsby
http://independentmedia.ca/survivingcanada
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/rad-green
In the contradiction lies the hope
--Bertholt Brecht.
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