[IPSM] Ontario airlifts 1000 Cree out of reserve
Mike D
miked at riseup.net
Wed Oct 26 07:59:57 PDT 2005
Ontario to airlift 1,000 from Cree reserve
Last Updated Tue, 25 Oct 2005 22:21:36 EDT
CBC News
About 1,000 residents of the Kashechewan First Nation in northern Ontario
will be evacuated from their reserve, where high amounts of E.coli
bacteria have fouled drinking and bathing water for years.
Ontario Aboriginal Affairs Minister David Ramsay says about half of the
residents of the remote reserve on the shores of James Bay will be flown
out of the area beginning Wednesday.
Untreated water from the Kaschechewan reserve in northern Ontario. (CP
Photo)
"We've decided we're going to start a medical evacuation of patients who
need to be treated," said Ramsay. "The doctors told us better treatment
could be obtained outside of the community."
Traditionally, he said, serious medical cases have been treated in Timmins
or Cochrane, both about 450 km to the south.
"It is a medical emergency, so these people really need to be removed."
About half of the reserve's 1,900 residents are suffering from skin
conditions aggravated by the high levels of chlorine being used to
disinfect the water, which has high levels of E. coli.
Protesters on the Kashechewan First Nation reserve.
The Cree reserve has been under a boil-water advisory for two years, but
intermittent water problems have been reported for five years.
Ramsay also says that in the long term, the entire community may need to
be relocated.
Grand Chief Stan Louttit of the Mushkegowak credits Premier Dalton
McGuinty with ordering the medical evacuation, but wants to know why it
took so long.
As for the possible relocation of the entire community Louttit says,
"There needs to be some discussions ... to the continuing problems of this
community."
NDP critic Gilles Bisson says there are 50 other native communities in the
province that also have to boil their drinking water.
The Walkerton inquiry recommended the province take over responsibility
for drinking water in native communities. So far, Bisson said, nothing's
been done.
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