Whittled away: Saskatchewan First Nation sues over land given over to farming
REGINA — A Saskatchewan First Nation is suing the province and the federal government to try to regain some control over traditional land it says has been whittled away by agricultural and industrial development.
A lawyer for the Carry The Kettle band said it’s the first time the courts have been asked to deal with how the spread of farming on the Prairies has affected treaty rights in southern Saskatchewan.
“It’s speaking about not just one project or a few projects or even a particular industry,” said Estella White. “We’re really calling attention to the conduct of Saskatchewan and Canada as a whole.”
There are almost 3,000 Carry the Kettle members near Sintaluta in southeastern Saskatchewan. The band claims almost all the southern part of the province as traditional territory and signed Treaty 4 in 1877 at Fort Walsh in the Cypress Hills.