First Nations leaders call for clear path forward on rights-based fisheries - Action News
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Indigenous

First Nations leaders call for clear path forward on rights-based fisheries

Twenty-five years afterthe Supreme Court Canada affirmed the rightof Maritime First Nations to catch and sell fish, one leadersays they need to come together and better address moderate livelihood fishing.

25 years after Marshall decision, groups calling for full implementation of treaty rights

People stand on rocks overlooking the ocean, one of them holding a red and white flag.
Members of the Sipekne'katik First Nation, supported by other First Nations, stand on the breakwater in Saulnierville, N.S., as non-Indigenous boats protest the launch the Mi'kmaw self-regulated fishery on Sept. 17, 2020. (Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press)

Twenty-five years afterthe Supreme Court Canada affirmed the rightof Maritime First Nations to catch and sell fish, one leadersays they need to come together and better address moderate livelihood fishing.

Kerry Prosper, a Mi'kmawelder and former chief of Paqtnkekin Nova Scotia, is calling on Mi'kmaq to acknowledge the seven districts and their councils and work under themto better relationships between themselvesand withthe fish and water.

"We've been separated because now with the constant resistance by DFO and the fishermen;we're down to having to individually try our own way," Prosper said.

In September 1999, Canada's highest court overturned Donald Marshall Jr.'sconvictionfor fishing and selling eels out of season and without a licence in Pomquet Harbour, near Paqtnkek.

Marshall, a Mi'kmaw man from Membertou First Nation in Nova Scotia, fought the case on the basis that thePeace and Friendship Treaties of 1760-1761 granted him the right to fish and sell eels. The Supreme Court rulingaffirmed the rightof Mi'kmaq, Wolastoqiyik and Peskotomuhkati peoples to fish, hunt and gather to earn a "moderate livelihood."

The court later clarified the rights affirmed in the decision could be subject to regulation in the case of conservation concerns and other public interests.

Reflecting on the challenges of recognizing First Nations fishing rights, Prosperpointedto the Sparrow Decision in 1990, which affirmedrightsparticularly in the context of fishing for food, social or ceremonial purposes.

He said at that time First Nations people were hopeful about exercisingtheir fishing rights, but weremet by apprehension from some non-Indigenous fishermen about the perceived impact of a rights-based fishery on commercial fishing.

An Indigenous man stands by a rock with a rock cliff behind him.
Kerry Prosper is a Mi'kmaw elder who was chief of Paqtnkek at the time Marshall was arrested. (submitted by April Prosper)

"I think Donald Marshall was really acting upon defining what social fishing was," Prosper said.

"He wanted to make a living ... and he just wanted to be by himself and exercise that treaty agreement that he had a right to fish and absolutely did."

In response to the Sparrow decision, the Aboriginal Fishing Strategy was developed in 1992 by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) to develop a food, social and ceremonial fishery that would be under DFO's jurisdiction.

Ongoing strugglefor implementation

Despite the rulings, efforts to implement rights-based fisheries across Wabanaki territory remain hindered by the lack of a cohesive framework, with notable conflicts arising in Esgenoopetitjin New Brunswickin 2000 and more recently inSipekne'katikin Nova Scotia.

On Tuesday's anniversary of the Marshall decision, Assembly of First NationsNational ChiefCindy Woodhouse Nepinak called for all levels of government to honour the Supreme Court's decisions about treaty rights.

Woodhouse Nepinak said the journey tofull implementation of these rights remains incomplete, leading to ongoing economic disparities and conflicts between rights-based and licence-based fish harvesters.

"It is important that we not only respect these rights, but fully integrate them into fisheries management and economic opportunities for First Nations," she said.

A portrait of a man with a mustache.
Donald Marshall Jr. addresses the crowd in Sydney, N.S., after leading a peaceful protest over fishing rights in 2000. (Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press)

A spokesperson forthe minister of Fisheries and Oceans said in a statementthere is "hard work ahead" in implementing those rights.

"We must continue our work in partnership with Indigenous communities to uphold treaty rights as part of our commitment to sustainable, orderly, and prosperous fisheries," the statement said.

Thestatement said there are two common objectives among everyone involved in fisheries: conservation and preservation of the ocean environment, and well-managed fisheriesto allow harvesters to gather without interference.