Red Cross stepping into Attawapiskat crisis

The Canadian Red Cross is expected to intervene in the crisis gripping the northern Ontario First Nation community of Attawapiskat where families live in tents, others in shacks with no running water and human waste is dumped from buckets into ditches.

By Jorge Barrera
APTN National News

The Canadian Red Cross is expected to intervene in the crisis gripping the northern Ontario First Nation community of Attawapiskat where families live in tents, others in shacks with no running water and human waste is dumped from buckets into ditches.

The Canadian arm of the international aid organization agreed to step in to find short-term help for the impoverished, fly-in community of 2,000 people currently grappling with a severe housing shortage, said NDP MP Charlie Angus.

The Red Cross agreed to get involved during a teleconference this evening with the chief of the community, the grand chief of Mushkegowuk Council and Angus.

Angus said Ontario and Aboriginal Affairs officials refused an invite to participate.

“With the Red Cross stepping in now, we hope to start coordinating a short-term response, while the larger, medium to long term response will take place once we bring the other parties (Ottawa and Ontario) to the table,” said Angus, whose riding of Timmins-James Bay includes the community.

More details about what the Red Cross intervention would entail are expected to be released Thursday.

A spokeswoman for the Red Cross said earlier in the day that the organization was considering stepping in to help Attawapiskat, but first wanted to determine what role the community wanted it to play.

“We are definitely in communication and figuring out what role we can play in terms of support and immediate need,” said spokesperson Tanya Elliot.

With temperatures dropping as winter approaches over this northern Ontario community that sits where the Attawapiskat River meets James Bay, community leaders fear death looms for the residents here who are being forced to live in conditions that have been described as “inhumane.”

Children are already suffering from illnesses and high fever and the flu is starting hit, said Monique Sutherland, the housing manager for the community.

“It is getting scary where the temperatures are dropping every week and we are getting nervous,” said Sutherland, who lives in a two-and-a-half bedroom trailer with six other people.

Sutherland’s oldest son was forced to live in a shack because there was no more room.

The Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario wrote an open letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty asking both levels of government to immediately intervene.

“We are deeply ashamed that federal and provincial officials are pointing fingers at each other and refuse to take responsibility, particularly as children and elders of Attawapiskat face life-threatening conditions as winter approaches,” said the letter, dated Wednesday. “As nurses, we are profoundly concerned about the dangers of fire, freezing, infectious diseases, skin conditions and mental health challenges that arise when people are forced to live in inhumane conditions.”

Angus said the situation in Attawapiskat, which sits about 90 kilometres away from a diamond mine, is a “national disgrace.”

Angus, who has posted a YouTube video depicting the dire situation facing the community, said he’s received calls and emails from people all over the world offering money and aid for the community, including from Haiti.

Angus said his office does not have the capacity to coordinate the international offers of help and hopes this would be one of the jobs the Red Cross would take on.

He said his office has received offers from Germany, the Netherlands and New Zealand.

“I’ve never seen such a response, we can’t keep up with it,” said Angus. “An aid worker in Haiti has even called.”

For weeks, the community, which declared a state of emergency, has been pleading for help, but all the federal Aboriginal Affairs department has offered is $500,000 to get the five families living in tents into some type of housing.

The numbers in this community paint a stark picture: 19 families live in shacks with no running water; 122 families live in condemned housing; 96 people live in one industrial-sized trailer and 268 new houses are needed immediately.

Many residents, including the elderly and children, are using the toilet in pails that are then dumped into ditches.

Sutherland said she’s been monitoring one shack with no running water that is home to a month-old baby girl.

“I feel that we are being ignored,” said Sutherland.

No officials from Aboriginal Affairs have visited the community, but a meeting is scheduled between department representatives and Chief Theresa Spence for Thursday in Thunder Bay, Ont.

The federal department refused a request for a telephone interview about the situation, but issued an emailed statement in response to the Red Cross’ involvement.

“Our focus is to move forward by addressing current challenges with housing in the community,” said the emailed statement.

In a previous emailed statement, the department said it has never received an official copy of the declared state of emergency.

The department said it has given Attawapiskat $9 million since 2004-1005 in direct funding for housing projects like construction and renovation.

Between 2004 and 2008, the department said it had given $4.5 million in major capital funding for the development of service lots in a new subdivision.

The community has even received $450,000 under the Conservative government’s “Economic Action Plan” for renovating houses on the reserve, the department said.

“First Nations are responsible for allocating their own housing funds, including decisions on the number of new units they may decided to build, according to the priorities and needs of the community,” said the emailed statement.

Sutherland said 25 houses have been built since 2008. She said the band has also been forced to redirect some of its other funding to things like education.

“It’s just not enough,” said Sutherland.

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9 thoughts on “Red Cross stepping into Attawapiskat crisis

  1. Anonymous says:

    Harper has billions to spend on his, wars, jets, ships, a stupid billion dollar fake lake. Billions on armored vehicles and billions on his Stalag’s, even though the crime rate is down. nnHe gives billions of our tax dollars to, banks, mines, large corporations, gas and oil company’s.u00a0 This is so, I saw that motion pass on the House of Commons TV channel. Harper also gives them huge tax reductions.u00a0 Now Harper does his dirty work behind closed doors, and hidden from the citizens.u00a0 Too late, we already know him for what he is. Shame on Harper, he is the worst P.M. in Canadian history. He rewards corrupt scum such as Campbell, by giving that monster, the High Commissioner to England appointment.nnHarper sends our young military to war, now he won’t look after them. Too bad if they lose their arms, legs, and have other war injuries. They are on their own.u00a0 The WW11 vets are being treated like dirt too. They say, Harper is a fascist dictator. Exactly what our young Canadians boys in WW11, were fighting, so we wouldn’t have scum like Harper, running our country.nnShame on Canada, for not recognizing the First Nations war veterans.u00a0 The bled and died too. Harper doesn’t give a damn about the citizens. He certainly doesn’t give a damn about the F.N. people. He is forever trying to force them to give up their hunting grounds, their river’s lakes and streams for his greed. Trying to peddle the dirty tar sands oil, to every country he can con into accepting the dirty grunge. So what,u00a0 if the Fist Nations depend on the salmon, big game and the sea to feed their people. he just doesn’t give a damn.u00a0 They have to constantly fight Harper, to preserve their food sources.nnIt’s about time, Harper for once in his life….to give our First Nations, clean drinking water, schools where the kids don’t have to keep their winter jackets on, to keep warm. Decent housing with running water,u00a0 hydro and heat.

  2. This is tragic!!! u00a0How often do Canadian rush to help people in OTHER Countries, while these FELLOW Canadians are left to exist in this situation!!!!

  3. And what kind of a house does the Chief live in? Are there no trees growing in the area to build log cabins to live in or they waiting for the government to build them houses to live in.Are they so helpless or just too lazy to do some things for themselves.

  4. Does it strike anybody as amazing that Indians dont even have the capability anymore to build homes and shelter themselves? Im sure that in some communities getting some necessary materials may be hard, but would this be prioritized. It seems that government support has left these people completely unable to help themselves.

  5. Why do natives have to depend on Aboriginol affairs when they don’t want to help. I feel for the elders and children of that community. Wish the federal government get off their lazy ass and do something for these people before it’s to late.n

  6. Charlie Angus is a true leader working tirelessly to bring this issue to the forefront. u00a0Thank you Registered Nurses Assoc. of Ontario for your letter to the PM and premiere. u00a0Kudos to the Red Cross for stepping up. u00a0 I don’t understand the glaringly blind and deaf response to this dire situation. u00a0International offers of support shame our own government.

  7. John Duncan what say you? I know you’re just Harper’s mouthpiece but there could be ‘some’ action to show Harper’s self-described “support” for the North is more than his usual platitudes. Thisu00a0governmentu00a0is all optics. As long as they say something we’re supposed to buy it, even without corresponding action.

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