For Acadian fisherman, early Mi’kmaq fishery in N.S. bay can ‘never’ be respected
METEGHAN, N.S. — As he stands calmly splicing anchor rope, Roger LeBlanc describes the anxiety, anger and suspicion over a Mi’kmaq lobster fishery that is coursing through his small Acadian community.
“This stock has been building up for 150 years, and my grandfather and my father and myself, we sat at the table with governments, we made rules to have a livelihood for our kids and grandkids,” he said during an interview this week at his workshop in Meteghan, a largely French-speaking town on St. Marys Bay.
“In a few more years, what we worked for . . . will be gone.”
The threat perceived by LeBlanc, 61, is the launch of a lobster fishery by Sipekne’katik First Nation in September, with the band citing the 1999 Supreme Court of Canada’s 1999 ruling that stated East Coast Indigenous nations have the right to earn a “moderate livelihood” from their catch.