Mtis rights case finally before Supreme Court of Canada - Action News
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Politics

Mtis rights case finally before Supreme Court of Canada

The Supreme Court of Canada will hear arguments on whether Mtis and non-status Indians fall under federal jurisdiction as other aboriginal people do. The outcome will help determine the programs they are entitled to and which level of government should pay. Read a recap of our live blog.

It took 16 years to get the case heard by the high court

In 1999, prominent Mtis leader Harry Daniels started the landmark Mtis and non-status Indian rights case that is before the Supreme Court Thursday. Daniels died in 2004. (Mtis Council of Prince Edward Island)

A much anticipated court case about Mtis and non-status Indian rights is finally before the Supreme Court of Canada Thursday, 16 years after the legal wrangling began.

The top court is being asked to determine whether the approximately 200,000Mtis and400,000 non-status Indians in Canada have the right to be treated as "Indians" under the Constitution Act and fall under federal jurisdiction.

Mtis and non-status Indians arguethat because neither the provinces nor Ottawa have been willing toaccept jurisdiction, they have fallenthrough the cracks.

"So you see them showing up on our streets in our major cities, not properly educated, without proper health care, without proper social services;the forgotten people, said Joseph Magnet, lead counselfor the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples (CAP).

The landmarkcase was launched in 1999 by prominent Mtis leader Harry Daniels,but it did not go to trial until 2011. In an historic victory, the Federal Court ruled in the Mtis and non-status Indians' favour, declaring they fall under federal jurisdiction, meaningthey could try to negotiate access to federal programs and services.

'Most disadvantaged of all'

In his 175-page judgment the trial judge highlighted the real effects of a lack of status when he quoted an internal government document on the matter: "TheMtisand non-status Indian people, lacking even the protection of the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, are far more exposed to discrimination and other social disabilities. It is true today that in the absence of federal initiative in this field they are the most disadvantaged of all Canadian citizens."

After the federal government appealed the ruling, the federal Court of Appeal upheld the lower court's ruling in favour of the Mtis, but not in favour of non-status Indians.

Neither lower court gave the Mtis and non-status Indians the additional declarations they were looking for: that if they do fall under federal jurisdiction, the federal government has afiduciary obligation to them and an obligation to negotiate with them.

CAP appealed to the Supreme Court, hoping to get a final determination. In a sign of how big the stakes are, the case has 12 intervenors, includingaboriginal organizations and provincial governments.

"We've been treated as a people without rights and basically as a third class aboriginal peoples," said ClmentChartier, president of the NationalMtisCouncil, one of the intervenors in the case.

Harry Daniels died in 2004. His son,Gabriel Daniels, says he believes his father was put on earth for this case, to fight for the betterment of his people.

Gabriel Daniels is the son of the late Harry Daniels who started the landmark court battle for Mtis rights in 1999. Daniels appears in front of the Supreme Court of Canada on Oct. 6, 2015. (CBC)

"One of the big reasons he was here was to do this," Daniels says. "It's really an honour to see it unfold and I just hope it goes the way we want."

Federal position

The federal government continues to argue that the framers of the Constitution did not intend Mtis to be part of Section 91(24) of the Constitution, which spells out that "Indians" are the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal government.

And the federal government says in its factum thateven if Mtisand non-status Indians were to get that recognition, it would not compel Parliament to "exercise that legislative power in any particular way."

That is why CAP says it wants the court to also impose both negotiating and fiduciary duties on the federal government.

"Then they can't keep denying that they have to do something," says Dwight Dorey, CAP national chief.