National Indigenous Peoples Day - June 21, 2020

National Indigenous Peoples Day - June 21, 2020

June 17, 2020 at 12:00 PM

  

 UNIFOR

  

Dear members,

We’re asking you to share pictures of any activities that you participate in during National Indigenous History Month using the hashtag #IndigenousPeoplesDay and tag @unifortheunion.
  

Statement: 2020 National Indigenous Peoples Day

Unifor is proud to commemorate National Indigenous Peoples Day and Indigenous History Month. June 21 provides an important moment to celebrate Indigenous peoples’ diverse and enduring culture, history and achievements.

Unifor also acknowledges that action from our union is needed every day of the year. It begins with a recognition that Canada itself is founded on colonialism and cultural genocide against Indigenous people. And while that pain cannot be undone (or ignored), we can collectively work to implement the recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and other efforts to recognize the rights of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis people.

Those rights have been internationally codified in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People (UNDRIP). Last summer, stalling from Conservative Party caucus members in Canada’s unelected Senate obstructed the long-awaited adoption of UNDRIP as law. Unifor will again join with Indigenous organizations to lobby forcefully to have UNDRIP adopted in 2020.

In addition to the overdue adoption of UNDRIP, Indigenous communities are also still waiting for the Government of Canada to make good on its June 2019 promise to develop a National Action Plan to end violence against Indigenous women, girls, and two-spirited peoples. Minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations Carolyn Bennett has admitted not only was no plan going to be in place by June 2020, but there is no timeline for the plan’s completion. Unifor echoes the concerns raised already by the Native Women’s Association of Canada (NWAC), the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs, and many others. Unifor members can write to Minister Bennett online to demand better.

Inherent in the fight for Indigenous rights is the fight for access to resources, natural or otherwise. Across the continent, defending freshwater resources has been a top concern for Indigenous communities—and for good reason. Lack of safe water is a major concern for day-to-day health, but it also raises concerns about preventing the spread of COVID-19. Unifor calls on the federal government to ensure there is adequate funding in place to meet its 2015 promise to eliminate long-term drinking water advisories for all Indigenous communities in Canada.

For its part, Unifor re-commits to the national campaign for the adoption of the recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

In solidarity,

Jerry Dias
National President

  

  

Download the shareable

Download the Poster (PDF)

More materials for sharing in your networks can be found at unifor.org/june21

  


Source: Unifor

  

  

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