Connect with us

AMERICA

CANADA – Aboriginal people will be able to use their traditional names on passports

Publie

le

Ottawa announced on Monday that Indigenous peoples can now apply for their traditional names on passports and other government identification.

This decision comes in response to a call to action from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which called on governments to allow Survivors and their families to restore the names modified by the residential school system.

Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller said the announcement applies to all First Nations people. Inuit and Métis, and potentially affects hundreds of thousands of people who want their identity back on official documents.

All fees will be waived for the name change process, which involves passports, citizenship certificates and permanent resident cards, said Citizenship Minister Marco Mendicino.

The traditional names given to Aboriginal children have profound cultural significance. Yet for many First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples, colonialism has deprived them of these sacred names, Mendicino said at a press conference on Monday.

Insufficient change?
Minister Miller acknowledged that for some, the newly opened door to name change may not be sufficient.

The approach to the Canadian passport is different for many communities. Some reject it, as they reject the Canadian identity, so that doesn’t solve the problem, he said.

But what it does offer is that people who choose the Canadian passport can now see their aboriginal name, which is not just a symbolic issue, but a profound identity issue.

Most of the 94 Calls to Action of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission remain unsatisfied. although the ministers highlighted two bills that would enshrine indigenous rights in the oath of citizenship and align Canada’s laws with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

Source : Ici Radio Canada

Continuer la lecture
Cliquez ici pour commenter

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

AMERICA

NIGER – United States repositions its troops

Publie

le

The United States began “as a precaution” to reposition its troops in Niger, the scene of a coup in late July, the Pentagon announced on Thursday, September 07, 2023.

The Department of Defense is “repositioning some of its personnel and assets from Air Base 101 in Niamey (the capital, ed.) to Air Base 201 in Agadez”, further north, a spokesman, Sabrina Singh, told the press.

“There is no immediate threat to our staff or violence on the ground,” she added, calling the decision a “precautionary measure”. Singh also said that “some non-essential staff and subcontractors” had left the country several weeks ago.

Soldiers toppled the President of Niger, Mohamed Bazoum, on 26 July and placed him and his family under house arrest at the presidential palace. The United States has some 1,100 soldiers stationed in Niger, operating against active jihadist groups.

Continuer la lecture

AMERICA

NEW YORK – A dozen Senegalese arrested for selling counterfeit items

Publie

le

On the evening of Wednesday, September 06, 2023, a muscular intervention by the New York police led to the arrest of a dozen Senegalese nationals, mainly street vendors. Reportedly, the police operation was triggered by the sale of counterfeit items, an illegal activity in the United States.

The US authorities also seized the subject goods, while legal proceedings were instituted against those involved. According to sources, the sale of counterfeit items is strictly prohibited in the United States, and the U.S. authorities take the suppression of this activity seriously.

However, this incident has elicited varying reactions from the Senegalese community in New York, with some expressing concern about the fate of those arrested, while others stress the need to respect local laws.

At this point, the New York police have not yet officially communicated on this case, and the exact circumstances of the police intervention remain to be clarified.

Continuer la lecture

AMERICA

CANARY ISLANDS – 83 people aboard rescue canoe and 2 lifeless bodies discovered

Publie

le

3 people aboard a canoe were rescued by the ship Guardamar Calìope. Two (2) lifeless bodies, one male and one female, were discovered upon arrival in the Canary Islands.

With a cut and a design more or less identical to those of a Senegalese boat, the boat was spotted in the south of Maspalomas. According to the rescue team, they arrived in Arguineguin at 5:05am in the Canary Islands on 25 July 2023.

As a reminder, at least 14 lifeless bodies were found after a pirogue capsized overnight from Sunday to Monday, July 24, 2023 off the coast of Dakar, Senegal, said Samba Kandji, deputy mayor of the Ouakam district and a source of the gendarmerie.

‘They are migrants a priori,’ said Mr Kandji. Gendarmes and firefighters are on the beach of Ouakam, a district of the Senegalese capital, and continue Monday morning rescue operations in search of other bodies.

“The navy forced the boat to dock and people fled. I was told 14 (dead) but then two bodies came out. It can be assumed that there were 16” deaths, Kandji said a few minutes later.

A wooden boat, on which migrants were found, according to several witnesses on the beach, floats on the water near the bank.

A firefighter assured anonymously that search operations had begun at 01:00 hours.

The migratory route of the Canary Islands, a gateway to Europe in the Atlantic Ocean, has seen a marked increase in activity in recent weeks from the coasts of northwestern Africa.

Several tragedies have been recorded in the last two weeks. At least 13 migrants from around Dakar died in the sinking of their boat about a week ago off the coast of Morocco. Another boat capsized in Saint-Louis, in northern Senegal, killing at least 14 people.

Continuer la lecture

DERNIERS ARTICLES

FACEBOOK

PUB

NEWS +