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    The Ipperwash crisis occurred in 1995
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    along the shores of lake Huron in southern Ontario
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    and involved some members of the Stoney Point band
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    who in 1936 had a portion of their reserve expropriated
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    by the federal government for use as a provincial park
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    and that became Ipperwash Provincial Park.
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    During WWII the federal government expropriated
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    the rest of the reserve for use as an army training camp.
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    They forcibly relocated members of the Stoney Point
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    Band to the nearby reserve, which was Kettle Point.
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    They promised that the land would be returned
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    after the war. But of course the land was never returned.
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    Stoney Point Band members were basically
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    living as second class citizens on the Kettle Point
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    reserve where they suffered discrimination.
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    They had poor housing, etc.
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    So the descendants of those people always
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    remembered that they were supposed to get their
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    land back, but of course the land was never returned.
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    In 1980, the federal government paid just over
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    2 million dollars to the Kettle and Stoney Point Band
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    as partial compensation and again
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    promised that the land would be returned.
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    In 1992, a government committee called
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    for the land to be returned to the Stoney Point Band.
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    At that time, the members of the Stoney Point Band
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    served an eviction notice to the Department
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    of National Defence.
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    In May 1993, about 30 members of the Stoney Point
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    Band moved into a portion of the army base
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    where they set up a camp, with trailers,
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    and tents and whatnot.
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    Over the next couple years, they maintained
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    that reoccupation camp.
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    There were some minor incidents with the military.
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    But the military was beginning to close down the base
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    and began withdrawing equipment and personnel
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    In the summer of 1995, Stoney Point Band members
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    entered the provincial park because it was
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    being closed down for the season.
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    They wanted to reclaim that as well because
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    that was not only a portion of their original reserve
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    but it also contained a burial ground
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    that the federal government was aware of
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    back in the 1930s when they expropriated it.
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    As they began the occupation of the provincial
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    park, the Ontario provincial government sent in
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    the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP)
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    and wanted the people evicted.
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    So the OPP began a major police operation.
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    they had brought in a couple hundred police officers,
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    they got military assistance including
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    two armoured personnel carriers.
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    On September 6th, they sent in a riot squad
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    to attempt to forcibly evict the people
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    from the provincial park.
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    But they fought back and forced the riot police
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    to withdraw.
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    But they came back later that evening.
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    Not only the riot police but a heavily armed
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    tactical response unit.
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    When the police entered the provincial park,
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    there was a band councillor from Kettle Point
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    who tried to intervene to stop the police.
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    But he was badly beaten by the police officers.
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    At that point, a sixteen year old youth, Nicholas Cotrelle,
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    drove a school bus into the police lines
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    in an attempt to stop the assault.
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    At that time the police opened fire,
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    and they fired between 1000 to 2000 rounds.
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    They shot the sixteen year old youth in the back.
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    They killed the dog that was also on the bus.
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    And at that time, acting sergeant Kenneth Deane
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    shot and killed Dudley George.
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    Even though the police had launched this major
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    operation, they had no medical assistance
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    on hand so Dudleyâs brother Pierre George
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    actually drove him to a nearby hospital
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    but he was pronounced dead at around midnight.
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    Kenneth Deane was eventually charged
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    with criminal negligence causing death.
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    During his trial, the judge found him to be
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    untruthful because Deane claimed that he saw
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    Dudley George carrying a rifle
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    and thatâs why he opened fire.
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    But even though the judge found him to be untruthful,
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    he only got two years community service.
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    In 2003 the Ontario government called a inquiry
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    into the crisis.
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    All these different documents came out and
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    it was found that Mike Harris who was the
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    premier at the time of the crisis had intervened
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    and called for the police to forcibly evict
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    the Natives from the park.
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    In 2016, the federal government paid 90 million dollars
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    to the Kettle and Stoney Point Band as compensation.
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    To this day, the members of the Stoney Point Band
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    continue to live on the former army base
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    which was their reserve lands.
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    They basically won their struggle,
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    even though there was a lot of sacrifice.
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    Dudley George was shot and killed.
Title:
vimeo.com/.../232681190
Video Language:
English
Duration:
04:40

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