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Taking it to the streets
Protesters close downtown intersection in global day of action in support of Idle No More

Laura Busch
Northern News Services
Published Monday, January 14, 2013

SOMBA K'E/YELLOWKNIFE
Aboriginal and non-aboriginal Yellowknifers took to the streets to block traffic at a busy downtown intersection over the lunch hour on Friday to support the Idle No More Movement's Global Day of Action.

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Lawrence Nayally addresses a crowd of between 150 and 200 people at the intersection of 50 Avenue and 50 Street during an Idle No More demonstration on Friday. A Global Day of Action for the Idle No More movement on Jan. 11 coincided with a meeting in Ottawa. - Laura Busch/NNSL photo

Between 150 and 200 participants gathered at the intersection of Franklin Avenue and 50th Street, one of Yellowknife's busiest, to show solidarity with the movement. Volunteers handed out information to passersby while others prepared stew and bannock in a heated tent temporarily erected in the parking lot of Centre Square Mall.

"There are a lot of people involved in organizing and stuff like that. It does take a lot of time, but it's for a really good cause," said Melaw Nakehk'o, co-organizer of Idle No More – Denendeh. "It feels really good that we can be a part of that and that we can encourage everybody to come out as a community."

As members of the movement held demonstrations throughout Canada and internationally Friday, in Ottawa a much-anticipated meeting took place between Assembly of First Nations Chief Shawn Atleo, other native leaders, Prime Minister Stephen Harper and other representatives from the federal government.

Results of the meeting were unavailable by press time, however, Nakehk'o does not believe the changes lobbied for can be addressed by a single meeting.

"No ... the relationship rebuilding is going to take quite a while. As for the Idle No More movement ... it's going to continue," she said.

"In Denendeh, a lot of our concerns are with the changes to environmental (protection) and the changes in our right to consult."

Former Dene National Chief Noeline Villebrun, who participated in Friday's rally in Yellowknife, agreed there is an extreme lack of consultation with aboriginal groups on the part of the federal government. This lack of consultation violates treaties struck between early European settlers and First Nations groups, she said, and those treaties are what made Canada possible.

"They promised my ancestors that if they moved out of the bush into communities, under council of orders, that they would assist them, not make them dependent. And so, what they have is us dependent on their little bits of money and policies that weigh us down – the Indian Act," said Villebrun. "My treaty, that my ancestors signed on July 25, 1900, is not fulfilled and this is why I say and do what I do."

While Idle No More promotes awareness about aboriginal inequality and other issues, it is an all-inclusive movement open to all Canadians, said Nakehk'o.

Katrina Nokleby, an environmental engineer based in Yellowknife, participated in the demonstration on Friday, holding a sign that read: "Environmental engineer; I stand in solidarity with Idle No More in support of Mother Earth!"

It was not the fact that she is a non-aboriginal person that made her hesitate in getting involved in the Idle No More movement, she said, but fear of professional backlash.

"Career-wise I'm a little more concerned with being vocal," she said. "But I'm at the point where I feel that something needs to be said and I would rather be part of the solution than part of the problem. So, I feel I have to stand up."

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