Indigenous leaders, experts urge Ottawa to quickly pass UNDRIP bill before election
OTTAWA — Indigenous leaders and legal experts are pushing federal lawmakers to ensure long-promised legislation to enshrine the rights of Indigenous Peoples into Canadian law doesn’t end up once again on the cutting room floor.
National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations Perry Bellegarde told a Commons committee today he fears the Liberal government’s bill respecting the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples could get tangled in legislative limbo before Parliament rises for the summer or is dissolved for an early election.
Bellegarde says this would be a step backward in the road to reconciliation.
The AFN is proposing some tweaks to the bill, including speeding up a proposed action plan to implement the bill from three years to two and adding clear references to “racism” long endured by Canada’s Indigenous Peoples.