Tapes show Ontario Tories pushed for lethal police assault
at Ipperwash
By Lee Parsons
31 May 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Taped conversations between senior Ontario Provincial Police
(OPP) officers have exploded the claim of former Premier Mike
Harris that he and his Tory provincial government played no part
in the police action that led to the killing of an unarmed native
protester at Ipperwash Provincial Park in 1995. The tapes, which
were played earlier this month at a public inquiry into the police
killing of Dudley George, indicate that the Tory government was,
on the contrary, intimately involved in directing the police and
that the premier and others in his administration helped instigate
the use of excessive and lethal force against a small group of
aboriginal people demanding fulfillment of a land claim.
The Ipperwash confrontation came only weeks after the Conservatives
took power in Canadas most populous province promising the
Common Sense Revolutiona program of radical right-wing measures
aimed at gutting the welfare state and redistributing wealth in
favor of big business and the well-to-do. The occupation at Ipperwash
provided the Tories with the opportunity to send a message to
Ontario that they meant to bulldoze through their program of punitive
measures against welfare recipients, massive social spending and
tax cuts, and anti-union laws regardless of public opposition
or dissent.
The recorded conversations are particularly damning in light
of the Tories adamant denials of charges by the George family
and others that those at the highest level of government had orchestrated
the polices actions from behind the scenes, issuing directives
that led to the shooting of the 38-year-old Dudley George. During
the eight years they were in office, the Tories stubbornly rejected
calls for a public inquiry into the events at Ipperwash, even
after the police sniper who killed George was convicted of criminal
negligence causing death.
During a February 1997 exchange in the Ontario legislature,
in which opposition members charged that the government was not
telling the truth about its involvement in the police action at
Ipperwash, Premier Harris declared, You make up imaginary
files. You make up imaginary involvement.... We had no involvement.
The occupation of Ipperwash Provincial Park, which lies on
the shore of Lake Huron in southern Ontario, was staged by native
protesters in September 1995 to press a longstanding claim for
ownership of the park, which is situated on traditional native
land including a Chippewa burial ground. Expropriated during the
Second World War for a military base, the land was to have been
returned to the Chippewa long before, but for decades the federal
government dragged its feet. The protest itself lasted less than
three full days, before 200 heavily-armed police expelled the
protesters from the park.
Government and police thuggery
The tape-recordings in question only surfaced last year after
being suppressed by the police. They are the starkest evidence
to date that governments claims of non-involvement were
flagrant and willful distortions or, more accurately, lies.
The tapes include telephone conversations on September 5 and
6, 1995the latter coming just nine hours before the police
broke up the occupationbetween John Carson, the senior officer
at Ipperwash and current OPP deputy commissioner, and Ron Fox,
who was the forces liaison officer for aboriginal affairs
at Queens Park (the seat of the Ontario government.)
Fox had been involved in a number of meetings and conversations
with top government officials and was clearly alarmed by the message
delivered to him to end the occupation quickly and forcefully
regardless of the consequences.
The premier was quite adamant, Fox told Carson,
that this is not an issue of native rights and in his words,
I mean weve tried to pacify and pander to these people for
too long. Its now time for swift affirmative action.
Inspector Foxs remarks give a chilling characterization
of the Harris governments attitude toward Canadas
aboriginal peoples and basic civil rights. Were dealing
with a redneck government, says Fox. They are fucking
barrel suckers, they just are in love with guns.... Theres
no question, they couldnt give a shit less about Indians.
Carson replies saying, They just want us to kick ass. Were
not prepared to do that yet. This, from men whose job it
is to defend a social order in which the prerogatives of capital
take precedence over social needs and who are trained to use force
against anyone who stands in their way.
A second conversation concerning a September 5 meeting of the
governments Interministerial Committee on Aboriginal Emergencies
attended by over 20 top officials, including Harris chief
aide Debra Hutton, underscores that the government had no interest
in defusing the situation, let alone negotiating. Hutton, Fox
related to Carson, made a very much powered, i.e.,
forceful presentation, of the premiers position: basically
the premier has made it clear to her, his position is therell
be no different treatment of people in this situation.... In other
words, native as opposed to non-native ... and the bottom line
is, [he] wants them out.
It is further revealed in these recordings that the government
was determined to ignore what was a legitimate land claim and
treat the occupation as a simple case of trespass or intrusion
on government property. In addition to raising that issue, Fox
said he also pointed out at the meeting that there were women
and children involved in the occupation who would be put in harms
way if police took precipitous action. His appeals for caution
fell on deaf ears, even when he warned that the police and government
could end up with dirty hands. The government, Fox
told his superior, was on a testosterone high.
The OPP wanted the Ministry of Natural Resources to obtain
a court injunction ordering an end to the occupation so as to
put the police in a more solid legal and public relations position.
But such an injunction was not sought until the day after George
was killed.
Andrew Orkin, a lawyer for the Dudley George estate, said the
tapes vindicate the claims of the George family. For 10
years there have been ongoing choruses of denial of any political
involvement....This truth has finally been laid bare. What remains
to be seen is whether and how the OPP succumbed to an erosion
of the rule of law.
Predictably, Harris lawyer stonewalled, saying the tapes
only showed that the Conservative government was anxious for the
occupation to end. Lawyer Peter Downard claimed the allegations
against his client have been over-hyped again and
again, and this is just another example of that.
The inquiry and class politics
In 1995 the Ontario Conservative Party represented something
new on the Canadian political landscape. Drawing on the model
of the Republican Right in the US, the Tories appealed to the
narrow self-interest of middle-class voters with a program of
tax cuts and government deregulation, spearheading a big business
offensive that marked a sharp shift in class relations to the
right. Preying on social anxiety and mistrust of government, the
Tories took sweeping action to divest the state of social responsibility,
privatizing and eviscerating social services while scapegoating
the poor and welfare recipients.
The new Tory government used the opportunity presented at Ipperwash
to assert a no-holds barred attitude that would become its hallmark
in ramming through its class war policies.
The inquiry into the police action at Ipperwash was only called
when the Liberal government headed by Premier Dalton McGuinty
took office in the fall of 2003. The Liberals, who have made at
most token changes to some of the more grievous Tory policies,
have used the inquiry to try to portray their government as more
humane and caring than their predecessors.
Contrary to the Liberals promises to set things right in this
matter, it should be noted that whatever the outcome of the inquiry
there is little likelihood that anyone, beyond the police officers
already prosecuted, will be held to account. While even more damning
evidence may yet emerge at the inquiry, its terms of reference
explicitly limit it from laying individual blame. Inquiries of
this sort, while often bringing to light important facts and evidence
of official mistakes and wrongdoing, are typically used to allay
public concern while allowing government to carry on business
as usual.
Deputy OPP Commissioner John Carson will continue his testimony
at the inquiry when it resumes at the beginning of June.
Harris, who has remained active in the Conservative Party both
provincially and federallymost recently co-authoring a report
that calls for the establishment of a parallel private health
care system and spending and tax cuts to reduce the government
share of national income by $80 billion a yearis expected
to testify at the Ipperwash inquiry at some point during the summer.
Harris, it should be remembered, became the first sitting provincial
premier to testify at a judicial inquiry in over fifty years,
when in 2001 he was called before the inquiry into the deaths
of seven people in Walkerton who drank infected watera tragedy
in which his government was also implicated.
See Also:
Ontario Premier resigns
Amid mounting legal and political crises
[23 October 2001]
Ontario Premier forced
to testify about Ipperwash killing
[1 December 2001]
Ontario inquiry finds
Tory government responsible for Walkerton deaths
[3 August 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |