First Nations elder pleads for help after mercury poisoning
Betty Riffel says mercury from Dryden paper mill poisoned her people and is looking for compensation
CBC News
Posted: Dec 28, 2012 3:57 PM ET
Last Updated: Dec 28, 2012 3:35 PM ET
A sign near Grassy Narrows First Nation.
Wabauskang First Nations elder Betty Riffel says the same mercury poisoning that affects Grassy Narrows and Whitedog First Nations also affects her community. Both of those First Nations received a multi-million dollar settlement, including the establishment of the Mercury Disability Board to compensate individuals, she said, adding the people of Wabauskang have received nothing. (Jody Porter/CBC)
A 73-year-old from Wabauskang First Nation has written a letter to the media, stating she's running out of time — and options — to address mercury poisoning in her community.
Betty Riffel said Wabauskang experienced the same contamination as Grassy Narrows, but unlike its downstream neighbours, the community has received neither recognition nor compensation.
Mercury contamination from a Dryden paper mill was discovered in the English-Wabigoon river system in 1970 — contamination that had allegedly been there for years.
Riffel said her brother died as a baby when they were living along the river. She said she believes he died, as did many other infants, as a result of being poisoned by mercury.
“Our community would be a lot bigger if those babies had survived,” Riffel said.
“They killed our people. That's what it looks like. Almost like genocide.”
A mercury disability compensation board, which was established in by the government in 1986, provides support for people at nearby Grassy Narrows and Wabseemong First Nations.
For decades, Riffel has been pushing for similar support, but to no avail.
The province says Wabauskang is not part of the compensation board because it is located on a separate watershed.
No 'political will'
Kathleen Wynne, who was Ontario's Minister of Aboriginal Affairs before she decided to take part in the race for Liberal leader, said changes to the compensation board would require federal help — something that isn't easy to come by.
“This is a very difficult issue around a tragedy involving the poisoning of the environment,” she said.
But Wynne vowed, if she becomes Premier, she'll continue to pursue the issue.
Lawyer Kate Kempton, who has worked with Riffel to help pressure the government, said it should be "relatively easy" for Ontario and Canada to come up with a formula for compensation for Wabauskang.
They could base it on the mercury disability compensation board already in place at Grassy Narrows and Wabseemoong, Kempton said, “but the political will doesn't seem to be there and, to me, that's a crime.”
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