‘A dirty deed’: Fort McMurray Métis demand apology after historic eviction of an Indigenous settlementPosted in Articles, Canada, Media Archive, Native Americans/First Nation, Politics/Public Policy, Videos on 2018-05-02 15:29Z by Steven |
CBC News
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
2018-04-25
David Thurton, Mobile Journalist
Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada
Moccasin Flats is the unresolved story of how at least 12 Indigenous families were evicted or relocated from a Fort McMurray riverside community in the late 1970s to make way for a city expanding feverishly to accommodate oilsands growth.
That history still pains Fort McMurray Métis president Gail Gallupe.
“It was really a dirty deed,” Gallupe said. “To be ignored and to be treated so shabbily in those days. There was so much discrimination and so much racism.”
On Monday, the Fort McMurray Métis local announced it will commission an academic study that aims to clarify details of the contentious removal of the predominantly Métis settlement for oilsands development…
Read the story here.