Yahoo – AFP,
Clément Sabourin, 31 March 2014
Broadback
Valley (Canada) (AFP) - Beyond a clear-cut in Quebec's far north -- marked by a
sign that reads "the road of destruction ends here" -- aboriginal
Canadians are fighting for an ancient forest and their traditional hunting
rights.
Canada's
boreal forest is the largest intact forest in the world, comprising one-third
of the forest circling the North Pole above the 50th parallel.
In this
remote part of Quebec province, just south of the frozen Broadback River, the
coniferous forest is home to hundreds of wildlife species including the
endangered woodland caribou.
![]() |
An area
cleared of trees is seen in Canada's
Broadback Valley, one of the last
remaining
virgin boreal forests in Quebec, on March
12, 2014 (AFP Photo/Clement
Sabourin)
|
For
centuries, Cree tribesmen have also lived and hunted in these woods.
They lived
without hindrance until the 1970s, when logging and the construction of
hydro-electric dams in the James Bay region started to encroach on them.
In 2010, a
dozen Cree tallymen -- tasked with supervising trapline activities -- decided
to take a stand on behalf of 16,000 Cree who live in this area, and blocked
logging roads in protest.
They say logging
offers few benefits to indigenous people, while damaging the environment.
The sign on
a dirt road six kilometers (four miles) south of the river represents their
last stand.
They have
demanded that some 13,000 square kilometers (5,020 square miles) of wilderness
north of the marker be set aside for a nature preserve.
Forestry companies
had agreed to a logging moratorium but that expired last June, and the Grand
Council of the Crees has yet to reach an accord with the Quebec government.
Election
issue
The future
of the forest is an issue in the province's general election.
![]() |
Map of
Canada's Boreal Forest showing species, fauna and communities
it preserves (AFP
Photo/K.Tian/M.LeMoël, mlm/fh/vl/jj)
|
The Liberal
Party, which is leading in the polls, favors massive exploitation of untapped
natural resources in Quebec's far north.
View
galleryAn area cleared of trees is seen in Canada's
Broadback …
An area
cleared of trees is seen in Canada's Broadback Valley, one of the last
remaining virgin …
Liberal
leader Philippe Couillard said on the campaign trail that "thousands of
jobs, millions of cubic meters of wood and (several) pulp mills are at
stake."
The
Liberals' main rival, the Parti Quebecois, has also pledged to significantly
boost logging in the province over the coming years.
"At
least they haven't started handing out exploitation permits yet," said
Steven Blacksmith, the natural resources administrator for the Cree reserve of
Waswanipi.
![]() |
Sophie, an
elder of the Indian Cree
community of Waswanipi, Canada, is
shown on March 10,
2014 (AFP Photo/
Clement Sabourin)
|
The
industry accounts for 2.7 percent of the province's gross domestic product,
exporting billions of dollars worth of lumber, pulp and paper each year.
But it has
struggled with every up and down of the global economy.
Standing in
the middle of a logged section of his former trapline, Don Saganash points in
every direction and laments: "We can't hunt here; the animals don't have
any shelter anymore."
"We
can't even trap marten anymore," echoes his cousin Malcolm. "This winter
I caught none, whereas before I would catch 100."
Hunting is
not just for sustenance or sport but at the heart of Cree culture, and has been
recognized in Canadian law as a right for natives nationwide.
But those
rights are being tested by lumberjacks pushing further and further north, Don
says.
From time
to time, forestry industry representatives stop in at Don, Malcolm and another
cousin Philippe's hunting camp deep in the woods to announce plans for logging
nearby, and offer the trio compensation.
"I say
no, but they still move forward," says Malcolm.
Philippe
said there were now three forestry companies on his land -- traditional Cree
territory.
"They
never ask (for permission). They don't care about what we think," he says.
![]() |
A logging
truck races through the forest
north of the Indian Cree community of
Waswanipi, Canada, 600kms (373 miles)
north of Montreal on March 11, 2014
(AFP
Photo/Clement Sabourin)
|
Cree fear
they are witnessing the twilight of their ancestors' way of life.
Huddled
around a wood-burning stove to cook moose meat in the Cree village of
Waswanipi, about 200 kilometers (120 miles) south of the Saganash cousins' log
cabin, Cree elders are unanimous.
"The
water, the fish, the meat (in the region) doesn't taste the same anymore,"
says Alice Happyjack.
"I
feel sad."
With heavy
eyelids, Joseph Neeposh explains in a Cree drawl that he has lived all of his
life in the forest and that Cree have a "spiritual connection" to the
land.
"Destroying
the forest is destroying us."
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