[IPSM] 'It's killing us off'
Macdonald Stainsby
mstainsby at resist.ca
Mon Nov 24 12:54:31 PST 2008
Mon, November 24, 2008
'It's killing us off'
Oilsands development a danger to aboriginal community: Band member
By KEVIN CRUSH, SUN MEDIA
(audio of Mike Mercredi's speech from Dominion Radio at Everyone's
Downstream II here:
http://oilsandstruth.org/quotslow-industrial-genocidequot )
Mike Mercredi, a community member of Fort Chipewyan, was on hand
yesterday at Edmonton’s Native Friendship Centre to talk about the
impact an oilsands development is having on his First Nations community.
Fort Chipewyan is facing a "genocide" from oilsands development, says a
member of the First Nation.
"It's a slow, industrial genocide and Fort Chipewyan is a sacrifice,"
Mike Mercredi, 33, warned attendees at the Everyone's Downstream 2
conference at Edmonton's Native Friendship Centre yesterday.
Mercredi, who works for the band studying traditional land use, said
after his speech that this is a case of history repeating itself.
"It was biological warfare with smallpox (after the European settlers
arrived) and now we're almost facing that again," he said.
"We're facing another form of biological warfare and it's killing us
off. It's genocide. They know it's there but they're denying it."'
Upstream from Fort Chipewyan, oilsands companies are busy mining the
area around the Athabasca River.
Their sites are each allowed to release small amounts of waste into the
water, which Mercredi says is collectively building up and devastating
his tiny community of 1,200, located 610 km northeast of Edmonton.
Approximately 40 people attended the conference yesterday morning.
Put on by the Indigenous Environmental Network and Oil Sands Truth, the
conference tried to highlight the impact of oilsands development on
First Nations communities.
"We have got to create space like this to bring together all these
different interests that, in our opinion, truly represents the
majority," said organizer Clayton Thomas-Muller, an Ottawa-based
tarsands campaigner with the Indigenous Environmental Network.
While the conference highlighted Fort Chipewyan, it also drew attention
to the impact of an oil refinery being built near a First Nations
community in North Dakota and the 2010 Vancouver Olympics.
Thomas-Muller said the effects of development are hurting more than just
aboriginal populations.
"Anyone living below Canada's poverty line who can't afford $3,000 rent
in Fort McMurray is going to be impacted."
But it's further north where Mercredi sees the damage. A former truck
driver with Syncrude Canada, he said he quit a year ago when he realized
he was part of the problem that was destroying the community he grew up in.
As a child, he said the community could go years between funerals, but
now they are held almost monthly.
Since 1990, 108 people have died and Mercredi claimed much of it is
being caused by chemicals in the water.
Studies have refuted that, but Mercredi said those studies never
questioned the people who were actually sick.
He said Fort Chipewyan is a sacrifice to development and no one seems to
care.
But he suggested the circumstances would be different if the river
flowed south to Edmonton.
"There's only so much that people would say about a First Nations
community and help out, but once it's in a capital city and people there
were dying, it would be an epidemic."
http://www.edmontonsun.com/News/Alberta/2008/11/24/7513441-sun.html
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