Petapan Treaty: Innu accuse Quebec of bad faith on talks for innovative agreement
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 01/04/2024 (552 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
QUEBEC – Three Innu communities in Quebec are accusing the provincial government of acting in bad faith a year after the deadline passed to conclude a treaty that has been under negotiation for more than 40 years.
The chiefs of Essipit, Pekuakamiulnuatsh, and Nutashkuan say the Quebec government reneged on a commitment to finalize the Petapan Treaty before the deadline set for March 31, 2023. Instead, Quebec has “imposed a new deadline and demanded new information,” the chiefs said Monday in a news release.
A year later the chiefs, who represent about 12,000 people in the North Shore and Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean regions, are calling for a meeting with Premier François Legault and say they are “very seriously” considering legal action.

“We have played fair in listening to the new demands from Quebec,” the chiefs said. “We responded with the greatest speed and a real desire to give negotiation a chance. But there are limits to abusing our good faith.”
The Petapan Treaty, between the Innu First Nations, Quebec and Ottawa, would exempt the three communities from the federal Indian Act and recognize their right to self-determination and their ancestral rights.
The Innu nations reached a deal with Ottawa before the March 2023 deadline, but talks with Quebec are ongoing.
Ewan Sauves, a spokesman for Legault, said in an email Monday that the Quebec government still aims to reach an agreement with the three Innu groups.
“However, the Petapan Treaty project is a complex issue,” Sauves said. “Our teams are hard at work. We will not negotiate in public.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 1, 2024.