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Nelson warns feds
Kapyong site to be held 'hostage' in 'legal limbo'
ROSS ROMANIUK, Winnipeg Sun, 18 Jun 07
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The controversial chief of a Manitoba First Nation is vowing to hold Winnipeg's Kapyong Barracks site "hostage" until federal government officials hand over all the land his reserve is owed under a 135-year-old treaty.
Chief Terry Nelson of Roseau River First Nation issued the warning yesterday while discussing commercial enterprises planned for the band's newest reserve site just northwest of the city.
Federal Indian Affairs Minister Jim Prentice conferred official reserve status last Tuesday on about 75 acres of land recently purchased by the band in the Rural Municipality of Rosser. The chief stressed, however, that Prentice's move still leaves nearly 5,800 acres to be designated as reserve land for Roseau according to a 1996 settlement of a lawsuit in the matter.
He also insists the mothballed Kapyong military base, vacated by the Canadian Forces five years ago, should be transferred to First Nations control because it's "prime property."
"We're basically going to hold that hostage," Nelson said of the Tuxedo site, which has long been touted as ideal for commercial and residential development.
STOP DEVELOPMENT
"I'm going to keep it from being developed until they settle with us on our lands. We're going to keep that in legal limbo. We'll run them through court until such time as they deal with the land quantum for the reserves."
Nelson's tough talk comes as First Nations across Canada prepare for a "national day of action" on June 29 to push Ottawa to settle native land claims. The protest could include highway and railway blockades.
He and members of the Roseau reserve, 80 kilometres south of Winnipeg, will meet tomorrow to decide whether the federal reserve allowance in Rosser should spur them to withdraw any blockades they have planned.
Meanwhile, the Roseau band has ambitious business plans for the Rosser site near the north Perimeter Highway that it purchased from a private owner for about $600,000 several months ago.
"You will see a gas station there in a month and a half, ready for operation. That's the first order of business," said Nelson said, citing Swan Lake First Nation's reserve site and gaming lounge in Headingley as a model for the site.
"You will see, within maybe two to three years or maybe not even that, a car dealership for sure. You will see a restaurant, of course, and a VLT lounge pretty quickly," he said. "You're going to see a furniture warehouse. You're going to see quite a bit of development."
However, municipal approval is needed for such projects and the RM of Rosser has tried to concentrate commercial sites farther east, near Brookside Boulevard along the boundary with the city.
"We prefer to keep our commercial concentrated in one area," said Rosser Reeve Alice Bourgouin. "We don't want it scattered all over farmland."