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Aboriginal protest overshadows Canada’s 150th birthday celebration

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A singer sings a traditional aboriginal song during the Canada Place National Aboriginal Day celebrations in Vancouver on June 17. Photo: Xinhua
Reuters

Canada is enjoying a renewed sense of global prominence as it gears up to celebrate its 150th anniversary but Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Thursday the legacy of a mistreatment of indigenous people should be acknowledged during the festivities.

As Trudeau and Canada geared up for Canada Day festivities on Saturday, complete with fireworks and visits by Prince Charles and Bono, a group of indigenous activists set up a teepee on Parliament Hill in Ottawa to protest the celebration.

Police attempted to prevent the protest and arrested nine activists on Thursday before allowing the indigenous tent to go up just steps from Trudeau’s office.

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Aboriginal groups have complained for months that the 150th party glosses over historic abuses against them, even as Trudeau acknowledges the government’s historic failure to improve its relationship with them.
Tourists stand near an illuminated Canada 150 sign in Niagara Falls, Ontario. Photo: Bloomberg
Tourists stand near an illuminated Canada 150 sign in Niagara Falls, Ontario. Photo: Bloomberg

“It is important that even as Canadians celebrate Canada 150 we reflect upon the experiences and the importance of folding in and hearing the stories and experiences of indigenous Canadians,” Trudeau said as reporters asked him about the teepee protest.

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“We recognise that over the past decades, generations, indeed centuries, Canada has failed indigenous peoples ... I can understand the impatience from many people,” he said.

Trudeau came to power in 2015 pledging to fix the government’s relationship with 1.4 million aboriginals, who make up about 4 per cent of the country’s population, but two years later many accuse the prime minister of not doing enough to help impoverished communities.

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