Top News - August - 2003
Check out Ontario
Birchbark
THE ENTIRE CONTENTS OF WINDSPEAKER'S AUGUST
ISSUE
ARE ONLINE IN THE ARCHIVES - ACCESS IS RESTRICTED TO SUBSCRIBERS
ONLY.
CLICK HERE FOR ONLINE SUBSCRIPTION
INFO.
"We're
Back!"
Fontaine takes race in round two
Paul Barnsley, Windspeaker Staff Writer, Edmonton
Phil Fontaine is once again the national chief of the Assembly
of First Nations.
His July 16 victory over Six Nations of the Grand River Chief
Roberta Jamieson was secured when about half of those who had
voted for former National Chief Matthew Coon Come on the first
ballot chose not to follow his wish that they switch their allegiance
to Jamieson.
It was the second major defeat of the day for the incumbent.
Coon Come was forced out of the race when he finished last on
the first ballot, attracting the support of only 105 of the record-number
of voting delegates-564.
More than 3,000 people crammed the Shaw Convention Centre in
Edmonton to watch the chiefs go through the once-every-three-year
process of electing their national leader. Fontaine was unseated
by Coon Come in Ottawa at the last AFN election in 2000 in Ottawa.
The total number of people who attended this year's assembly
and the number of voting delegates were both all-time AFN records.
As he did after his victory in 1997 in Vancouver, a jubilant
Fontaine took the oath of office surrounded by his campaign team.
He smiled broadly as he listened to each regional vice chief
pledge to support him when he returns to the AFN's plush ninth
floor office at 1 Nicholas Street in Ottawa.
Before he could make his way off the stage to appear live on
CBC's The National, he had to take two congratulatory phone calls,
one from Prime Minister Jean Chretien and the other from Indian
Affairs Minister Robert Nault.
Nault also issued a statement immediately after the election
was completed. Alistair Mullin, the minister's manager of communications,
said the minister "will be issuing an invitation to Chief
Fontaine tomorrow to meet as soon as we can to discuss where
he intends to lead the AFN, and to see where we can work together."
"I would like to offer my congratulations to Phil Fontaine
on his election as national chief of the Assembly of First Nations.
The assembly has made a clear choice for a new direction,"
Nault said. "To all the candidates, I also offer my congratulations
for their effective and well-fought campaigns. Political life
is never easy, and I applaud you for having shown the courage
and personal conviction in your decision to run for this key
office. I look forward to working with the new national chief
and the AFN executive to improve the quality of life in First
Nations, and to enhance the economic and social opportunities
for their citizens. Together, we can chart a better future for
First Nations and for Canada."
After the first ballot, Fontaine appeared disappointed that he
hadn't broken the 60 per cent threshold that is required for
a candidate to be declared the winner. One of his campaign workers
said their polling led them to believe they had enough support
to have a shot at what would have been a first-ever first ballot
win.
He came up 48 votes short. His 292 votes was worth just below
52 per cent. Jamieson had 167 votes. Fontaine did get more support
than the other two combined, but the talk between ballots centred
on whether Jamieson could carry all of Coon Come's support and
pick up enough of Fontaine's delegates to make a race of it.
She needed to attract a mere 10 Fontaine delegates in addition
to Coon Come's support to bring the totals back to even.
But it was not to be. The Jamieson team, like many other observers,
underestimated the effectiveness of the Fontaine machine. When
the numbers were announced for the second ballot, the once and
future national chief had five more votes than he needed to bring
the election to an end.
"Chiefs, you have spoken," Fontaine said when he addressed
the assembly after being officially installed as national chief.
He stressed that unity is required for the AFN to be effective,
adding that First Nations people were at "a crucial point
in history."
"We have an opportunity to fundamentally change our relationship
with Canada," he added. "Soon, we'll have a new Prime
Minister. Today, First Nations have a new national chief."
Throughout the campaign, Fontaine was careful to use language
that would convince those who felt he was too close to the government
that he would stand up for treaty and Aboriginal rights. He acknowledged
that he had pledged to be vigilant in defending treaty rights
and in fighting to see that First Nations' inherent rights "will
be recognized and implemented."
"My mandate from you requires nothing less," he said.
Aware his remarks were being broadcast live across the country,
Fontaine spoke directly to the mainstream Canadian public.
"The poverty of First Nations people is an affliction we
all share," he said. "It's absurd to focus on the symptoms."
Echoing a concept that marked Coon Come's time in office, he
called for First Nations to get a "fair share" of Canada's
lands and resources.
"I say to all the resource companies, the wealth you enjoy
comes from the wealth of our ancestors," he said.
He promised to get to work right away, pushing for more First
Nations control of government institutions and a more direct
role in decision making when it comes to matters that affect
First Nations' people.
"I say to the other governments of Canada, 'we're back,'",
later adding, "To the government of Canada, I say to you,
sometimes we will be at each other's throats. Sometimes we will
be pulling in the same direction. But we will always be there."
After the final results were announced, Jamieson told the crowd
that the implementation committee, a group of chiefs she chairs
that has fought and lobbied against Nault's governance legislation,
will remain active. She heard Fontaine commit to join the fight
against the First Nations governance act and intends to hold
him to it.
Fontaine urged the minister to start the process over again,
this time working in concert with the AFN and the chiefs.
During a press conference after her defeat, Jamieson was asked
by a reporter if she was worried that Fontaine would be too conciliatory
in dealing with the government and its present agenda. She noted
that Fontaine's public remarks had not sounded very conciliatory
at all.
"We'll have to see how conciliatory National Chief Phil
Fontaine is because I heard him, we all heard him, say he opposes
the governance act. I took note of every commitment the national
chief made and I intend to hold him to every one," she said.
Later, in a one-on-one interview with Windspeaker in her campaign
room, Jamieson said she felt Fontaine had moderated his views
and moved more towards supporting a rights-based agenda.
"I heard a lot more of those kinds of commitments throughout
the campaign," she said. "I heard a strong rejection
of the governance act and I heard strong support for nationhood."
Asked if she planned on running again in 2006, Jamieson was non-committal.
But her campaign co-chair, Larry Sault, left the door open.
"Maybe we'll be back again," the former Mississaugas
of the New Credit chief said. "You never know."
Top
Charges
laid over Sagkeeng health center
Paul Barnsley, Windspeaker Staff Writer, Ottawa
Two separate RCMP investigations into possible corruption
at an on-reserve health centre have resulted in arrests in early
July.
Paul Cochrane, 56, a former assistant deputy minister with Health
Canada's Medical Services Branch (MSB) who lives in the Ottawa
suburb of Kanata, was charged with one count of breach of trust
and seven counts of fraud against the government on July 3.
Cochrane managed MSB, now called the First Nations and Inuit
Health Branch, from 1994 until 2000. The charges against him
stem from a two-and-a-half-year investigation by the commercial
crime branch of the RCMP's "A" Division into events
related to the management of the Virginia Fontaine Addictions
Foundation. The foundation managed a now defunct treatment centre
located on the Sagkeeng First Nation territory in Manitoba.
RCMP say their investigation began after Health Canada filed
a complaint in October 2000 that alleged that Cochrane received
bribes in relation to his business dealings with the foundation.
The Ottawa investigation is continuing and may lead to additional
charges, lead investigator Sergeant Stéphane Bonin said.
In the press release related to Cochrane's arrest, police allege
three people had given bribes to the former Health Canada official.
RCMP allege one of those people was Perry Fontaine, who was arrested
on July 8 at the Winnipeg International Airport. RCMP investigators
from the Winnipeg commercial crime branch charged the 49-year-old
former president of the addiction centre with fraud over $5,000.
The charge stems from alleged inflated travel claims that Fontaine
made while associated with the treatment centre, said RCMP spokesman
Les Dolhun.
Cochrane is alleged to have "provided a preferential treatment"
to the Sagkeeng health centre after receiving $50,000 in cash,
a sport utility vehicle and four season tickets for the NHL Ottawa
Senators for the 1998, 1999 and 2000 seasons from Fontaine. Cochrane
is also alleged to have received two other vehicles from other
people associated with the health centre and is alleged to have
received $10,000 in charitable donation receipts for contributions
that were never made.
This is the latest development in a story that began when Health
Canada discovered that Cochrane took a seven-day Caribbean cruise
with 70 staff members of the treatment centre on the government's
tab. When he was ordered home by then Health Canada Deputy Minister
David Dodge, he tried to bill the government for his travel costs.
When that was refused, he appealed to the Public Service Staff
Relations Board, which brusquely rejected the appeal.
Cochrane was suspended without pay on Dec. 8, 2000 and took early
retirement.
Health Canada has filed a $5 million lawsuit against the former
management of the health centre in an attempt to recover government
money that it alleges was not used properly.
Top