AFN to honour children who perished at residential school ahead of vote for new chief
OTTAWA — First Nations chiefs and delegates will gather virtually this week to discuss their communities’ priorities and plans for moving forward — even as they also reflect on a past brought into harsher light with the recent discoveries of unmarked graves at former residential schools.
The Assembly of First Nations’ 42nd annual general assembly begins Tuesday and will feature the election of a new national chief to represent the advocacy organization’s 634 First Nations, encompassing more than 900,000 people.
Outgoing National Chief Perry Bellegarde signalled his intention not to seek re-election last December, saying he has spent his six years in the role helping to bring Indigenous issues to the forefront of Canadian public life.
He has been called upon to respond to the news that First Nations have used ground-penetrating radar to locate what are believed to be the remains of hundreds Indigenous children buried in unmarked graves on the sites of at least three former residential schools.