Categories: Press-Releases

Listuguj Mi'gmaq Rangers to oversee First Nation's fall lobster fishery

[ad_2]

New fisheries enforcement protocol with Canada recognizes role of Listuguj Mi’gmaq First Nation’s own enforcement agency in fisheries governance

LISTUGUJ, QC, Sept. 26, 2022 /CNW/ – On September 26 the Listuguj Mi’gmaq First Nation (“Listuguj”) began its fall lobster fishery. The fishery is an exercise of the community’s rights under the Peace and Friendship Treaties. This year, for the first time, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (“DFO”) has agreed to an enforcement protocol that acknowledges the role of the Listuguj’s Mi’gmaq Rangers in governing the fishery. Significantly, the Mi’gmaq Rangers are a community enforcement agency that derives its authority entirely from Indigenous law, not the Fisheries Act.

“Recognition of the Mi’gmaq Rangers and the laws we use to govern our fishery is an important step towards reconciliation,” said Darcy Gray, Chief of the Listuguj Mi’gmaq Government. “Canada is finally starting to recognize that the best way to ensure our fishery is safe and sustainable is to get out of the way and let us govern ourselves.”

Listuguj has fished for lobster every fall for the past 20 years in the Baie des Chaleurs, within its traditional territory of Gespe’gewa’gi. Most lobster is distributed to community members for food. Some is sold to cover the costs or invest in the community. For years, Canada denied Listuguj’s treaty rights and banned the sale of fall lobster. Last year, however, Listuguj and Canada signed a rights reconciliation agreement that requires the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans to respect Listuguj’s treaty rights and acknowledge Listuguj’s Indigenous laws in fisheries. As a result, the DFO has changed course and now allows Listuguj to sell its fall catch.

Listuguj’s lobster fishery is governed by the community’s own law—the Listuguj Lobster Law—and the fishery is monitored by the community’s own enforcement agency—the Mi’gmaq Rangers.

Listuguj created the Mi’gmaq Rangers after violence er upted in 1981 when Sûreté du Québec officers stormed the reserve to destroy and seize equipment and suppress Listuguj’s

salmon fishery. In response, Listuguj set up the Rangers to enforce the community’s salmon law and protect its fishers. Importantly, the Rangers are not sworn in by either Quebec or Canada. They derive their authority from Indigenous law.

“We realised that the only way to fulfill our responsibilities to the fish in our waters and the members of our community was to pass our own law and take control for ourselves,” explains Chief Gray. “That meant we needed our own enforcement agency. The DFO is still out there, but now our Rangers are out there too.”

Violence erupted again in 2020 when non-Indigenous fishers in Nova Scotia reacted to the Sipekne’katik First Nation launching their own self-regulated fishery. In response, the House of Commons Standing Committee on Fisheries and Oceans recommended the Mi’gmaq Rangers as an alternative enforcement model that could keep peace on the water.

Now, Listuguj and Canada have signed a protocol that seeks to coordinate the enforcement activities of the Mi’gmaq Rangers under the Listuguj Lobster Law and of DFO Officers under the Fisheries Act. The goal is to align efforts to ensure a safe and sustainable fishery, while being respectful of both Mi’gmaq and Canadian law. The protocol requires any enforcement action to reflect Mi’gmaq values and acknowledge the impact and history of discrimination against Indigenous peoples by Canada.

Listuguj’s fall lobster fishery will run from September 26 to October 10, 2022.

For more information: 

Mike Isaac
Communications Manager, Listuguj Mi’gmaq Government 
418-788-2136 
Michael.Isaac@listuguj.ca  

Victoria Belton 
Public Relations Consultant, Media Profile  
416-997-5179
Victoria.Belton@mediaprofile.com

SOURCE Listuguj Mi’gmaq Government



Source link
[ad_2]
The content is by PR Newswire. Headlines of Today Media is not responsible for the content provided or any links related to this content. Headlines of Today Media is not responsible for the correctness, topicality or the quality of the content.

[ad_2]

PR Newswire

Recent Posts

Share repurchase programme

[ad_1] Nørresundby, 26 April 2024Announcement no. 23/2024 The Board of Directors of RTX has, cf. company announcement no. 20/2023 dated…

4 days ago

Gyroscope Market Size, Share And Growth Analysis For 2024-2033

[ad_1] Gyroscope Global Market Report 2024 – Market Size, Trends, And Global Forecast 2024-2033 The Business Research Company's Gyroscope Global…

4 days ago

Casting Off the Caste System and its Stigma: Empowering the Forgotten Indigenous People of India with Human Rights

[ad_1] ODISHA, India, and LOS ANGELES, Calif., April 25, 2024 (SEND2PRESS NEWSWIRE) — In the 1880s, to call attention to…

4 days ago

Alipay+ Enables Digital Payment of 14 Overseas E-wallets from 9 Countries and Regions in Hong Kong to Support City’s Global Travel Drive

In support of Hong Kong's new mega tourism and commerce drive, Alipay+ now enables users of 14 leading overseas mobile…

4 days ago

Celebrate "Bleach: Brave Souls" Reaching Over 90 Million Downloads Worldwide with "The Future Society Zenith Summons: Cyber" Featuring New Versions of Ulquiorra, Orihime, and Nnoitora

[ad_2] TOKYO, April 26, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- KLab Inc. announced that its hit 3D action game Bleach: Brave Souls has…

4 days ago

TransAlta Declares Dividends

[ad_1] CALGARY, Alberta, April 24, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The Board of Directors of TransAlta Corporation (TSX: TA) (NYSE: TAC)…

5 days ago