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Ontario Premier forced to testify about Ipperwash killing
By Lee Parsons
1 December 2001
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Six years after native protester Dudley George was murdered
by an Ontario Provincial Police officer, Ontario Premier Mike
Harris has had to submit to a legal interrogation by lawyers acting
on behalf of Georges family.
For several days this week and last, Harris underwent a discovery
interrogation arising from the civil suit that the George family
has brought against Harris, the Ontario government, and the Ontario
Provincial Police (OPP). The premise of the suit is that the premier
and the Ontario Tory government should be held to account for
Georges wrongful death since they directed the
OPP to drive George and other Indian protesters from Ipperwash
Provincial Park.
Harris has always categorically denied any personal or government
role in the police decision to attack the native protesters. But
in recent months evidence has emerged that refutes the Premiers
earlier claims that he did not meet with the head of the OPP on
the day of the murderous police assault on the Ipperwash protest
and that corroborates the charge that the OPP was directed by
the government to force a quick end to the native protest. A note
drafted by the then deputy attorney-general baldly states: AG
[Attorney-General] instructed by Premier that he desires removal
of [the protestors] within 24 hours.
Harris growing legal difficulties surrounding Ipperwashhe
is believed to be the first sitting Ontario premier to be compelled
to give evidence in a civil suitunquestionably contributed
to his October 16 announcement that he will be stepping down as
premier and provincial Tory leader next spring.
Harris and the Tories have gone to great lengths to derail
the George familys efforts to uncover the truth behind the
September 6, 1995 police assault at Ipperwash. Believing that
the government and police have not been forthcoming as to what
actually happened in the days and hours before the murderous police
action, Ontarios deputy privacy commissioner recently ordered
some forty government and police officials, including Harris,
to submit affidavits detailing all they know about the police-government
meetings that preceded the September 6 assault.
Despite the conviction of an OPP officer for criminal negligence
in the shooting and despite glaring anomalies in the police version
of events, Harris has consistently spurned calls for a public
inquiry into what happened at Ipperwash. The Tory Premier has
offered the spurious pretext that any such investigation should
await the outcome of the George familys civil suit. Yet
the Tories defeated a private members bill which proposed
that an inquiry be called once the courts have dealt with all
legal actions arising from Ipperwash, effectively admitting their
opposition to a provincial inquiry under any circumstances. Moreover,
the George family has repeatedly said that they will drop their
civil suit if the government calls a public inquiry into the police
murder.
To date, the Ontario government has spent in excess of $700,000
just on Harris own defence in the civil suit. And while
the premier claims he welcomes the lawsuit as a means to set the
record straight, he has taken full advantage of his legal rights
under the discovery procedure to ensure that what
happened at his interrogation remains secret.
A history of injustice
The months leading up to the September 1995 confrontation between
native protesters and the OPP saw the newly-elected government
of Mike Harris inaugurate its right-wing agenda with a brutal
attack on welfare recipients, cutting benefits by almost 23 per
cent. Faced with growing public opposition, the Conservatives
clearly hoped to use the suppression of the Ipperwash protest
to send a message that they would deal harshly with any who stood
in the way of their drive to dismantle public and social services
and roll back trade union and democratic rights.
The brutality of the state action at Ipperwash is all the more
remarkable considering the relatively small size of the protest
and its pacific character.
In early September 1995, some 30 to 40 Amerindians from nearby
Kettle Point Reserve, many of them women and children, occupied
the Ipperwash Provincial Park which is situated about 100 miles
west of Toronto on the shores of Lake Huron. The occupation was
timed to begin on Labor Day, after most tourists would have left,
so as to minimize the risk of a confrontation.
Local Indian bands have been objecting to government violations
of the treaties that their Chippewa forefathers signed with British
colonial officials almost since the day they were signed in 1827.
Among the first promises to be broken, was a Crown pledge to make
cash payments in perpetuity in exchange for the Chippewa agreeing
to settle on reserves.
The Ipperwash occupation was part of an ongoing struggle by
natives in the area to regain two parcels of land that were removed
from native control a half-century ago.
During the Second World War, the federal Liberal government
of the day invoked the dictatorial powers of the War Measures
Act to seize what was then called the Stoney Point Reserve for
the purpose of building a temporary military base. Against their
wishes, the Indians living at Stoney Point were forced to merge
with a band at nearby Kettle Point.
The government promised Stoney Point would revert to Indian
control once the war was over. But the lands were not returned
and a permanent military base, Canadian Forces Base Ipperwash,
was established instead.
Frustrated by innumerable delays in the return of their land,
a group of natives whose families had once lived at Stoney Point
broke down the gate of the military base in 1993 and began an
occupation. At the time, they were labelled terrorists by the
press, but a few months later the federal government conceded
that the land had been unjustly expropriated and said it would
return Camp Ipperwash to the natives. Native protesters remained
on the land to ensure that this time Ottawa lived up to its word.
Then in 1995, a group of Indians from Kettle Point decided
to launch an occupation of Ipperwash Provincial Park to press
their demand for return of a section of the park that is an historic
native burial ground.
In 1937, when workers were building the newly-created Ipperwash
Provincial Park, they discovered a native burial ground which
local band councils asked be fenced-off in respect for their ancestors.
The government of the day promised this would be done and subsequent
archaeological findings corroborated the burial grounds
authenticity, but no fence was ever built and the land was not
restored to native control.
When Dudley George and other Kettle Point band members occupied
the park in 1995, the police and Ontario Tory government claimed
that their action was based on a bogus claim. The day after the
killing, Premier Harris was adamant that there is no claim.
There is no burial ground. It has it has since been revealed
that Ministry of Natural Resources officials were in possession
of documents substantiating the claim of a burial ground in Ipperwash
Park no later than September 7. In an implicit rebuke of Harris,
federal Indian Affairs Minister Bob Irwin suggested a few days
after Georges killing that the Ontario government should
review its own 1937 document stating Ipperwash Provincial Park
is located on the site of a native burial ground.
The police assault
The police had known about the plan to occupy Ipperwash Provincial
Park and their initial stated objective was to contain and
negotiate a peaceful solution. But that is not what happened.
In the days and hours leading up to the occupation there was a
marked build-up of police personnel and equipment in the vicinity.
Eventually an army of over 200 OPP officers, including a riot
squad and the OPPs elite assault force, the Tactics and
Rescue Unit (TRU), was amassedthis despite the fact that
police intelligence had determined that the protest was to be
peaceful. They had sent badgers, police spies, into
the park prior to the occupation. Furthermore, the OPP and the
Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) had a mole planted
in the native community for months, if not years, who reported
that he had never seen the natives armed with guns.
The professed objective to contain the demonstration within
the park was somehow transformed into ... no negotiations
with the Stoney Pointers regarding their claim to ownership of
the land and the goal of any discussions would be
removal of the occupiers from the parkthis according
to notes of a meeting of government officials and police on the
day of the shooting.
No real explanation of this change has ever been provided.
But we do knowthe Tories denials notwithstandingthat
Harris was pressing, if not outright ordering, the police to bring
the park occupation to a speedy conclusion.
On the evening of September 6again for reasons that have
never been explainedpolice were instructed to drive the
protestors from a parking lot into the park proper.
With no warning, the Crowd Management Unit (CMU) or riot squad,
marched into the area where the Indian protesters had assembled
and violence ensued. When one native council member, Cecil Bernard
Slippery George, approached them to appeal for a peaceful
solution, he was set upon by at least 10 riot police wielding
shields and metal batons. He was beaten unconscious and when other
natives made a rescue attempt, driving a car and school bus at
the police, they were fired upon and one of them was wounded.
Dudley George, also unarmed but for a stick, emerged from some
bushes at that point and was fatally wounded by fire from one
of the TRU marksmen posted in a lookout above the scene. That
officer, Acting Sergeant Ken Tex Deane, was later
found guilty of criminal negligence causing death. He received
a sentence of community service and has continued to draw his
full pay as an OPP officer throughout the past six years.
In the course of Deanes trial, the testimony of the police
was thoroughly discredited, in particular regarding the near-death
beating of Slippery George and the claim that Deane and other
OPP had reason to believe some of the Indians were armed.
Slippery George (who is no relation to Dudley) was eventually
cleared of charges of assaulting the police. In finding him not
guilty, Judge Douglas Walker said, The evidence was consistent
with the intention to avoid being struck and run over, not to
commit an assault. Despite his extensive injuries and numerous
native witnesses, only one police officer has ever admitted that
the beating in fact took place. None of the participants was ever
identified, the Ontario Provincial Police Association having blocked
the identification of officers present at the Ipperwash operation.
In the days following the attack, when it became clear that
the legality of the police action to remove the protesters was
in question, the Crown laid the rarely used criminal charge of
forcibly entering and detaining the park against 24
people. Those charges were all eventually dropped and only one
native was ever convicted and that was for dangerous driving.
A published account
Much of the material in this article is based on information
provided in a recently released book titled One Dead Indian
(Stoddart, 2001) by Peter Edwards. In the book, Edwards, who
is a reporter for the Toronto Star, gives a detailed account,
based on extensive interviews and several years research,
of the events surrounding the September 6 OPP assault and the
ensuing battle of the George family and others to establish the
truth. Although the book suffers from the limitations of the authors
political sympathies with the Liberal Party, the facts Edwards
brings forward serve to indict the police and government while
raising a number of important questions regarding the killing
of Dudley George.
A major weakness of Edwards book is its failure to make
any connection between the police action at Ipperwash and the
Tory assault on working people in Ontario as a whole. In Edwards
account, the actions of the Harris government take on a merely
episodic character, disconnected from the big business offensive
against the working class. It is implied that under a different,
perhaps Liberal, government, such transgressions as Ipperwash
would not occur. But the federal Liberal Party, notwithstanding
the authors generous treatment, was complicit in preparing
this incident through decades of indifference and dishonest dealings
with natives in this region. Indeed, not until 1998, that is three
years after Dudley Georges killing and five years after
promising to do so, did the federal Liberal government relinquish
control of the Stoney Point military base. And now the Chretien
Liberal government has seized on the events of September 11 to
press for a battery of new laws that run roughshod over long-established
democratic rights.
The Ipperwash tragedy has been used by a range of interests
to further their own ends. Both the Liberals and New Democrats
have sought to leverage the dishonesty and brutality of the Harris
government in this matter to their advantage. Yet, given the outrageous
conduct of both government and police in the Ipperwash affair,
the opposition parties have been remarkably passive.
Besides the role Harris and his government played in ordering
the police to clear the Ipperwash protesters a number of major
questions remain unanswered. The vast majority of what should
be on record of those eventspolice audiotape and videotape
recordings as well as computer fileshave for one reason
or another, not materialized. None were made available at the
trial of Deane and it was claimed that they did not exist. Some
have mysteriously gone missing and, according to police testimony,
many were never made due to technical problems.
Why were over two hundred police summoned to deal with no more
than 40 protesters, many of whom were women and children? Why,
despite intelligence to the contrary, was the claim that the protesters
were armed with automatic weapons, accepted by police without
verification? Why have police not been compelled to release the
identities of the officers involved in the brutal beating of an
unarmed man? Why has the government been so determined to avoid
a public inquiry, leaving it instead to the dead mans family
to seek answers at their own considerable expense? And why, Edwards
book aside, has the mainstream media not been more aggressive
in exposing the role of the police and the Harris Tory government?
See Also:
Ipperwash gunman remains on Ontario police
force
[1 December 2001]
Ontario Premier resigns
Amid mounting legal and political crises
[23 October 2001]
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