logo
Tŝilhqot'in outlines a plan to deal with the toxic drug crisis — but needs the resources

Tŝilhqot'in outlines a plan to deal with the toxic drug crisis — but needs the resources

Yahoo13-05-2025

This story is published through the Indigenous News Alliance, which includes ICT.Cara McKennaIndigiNewsAt the United Nations headquarters in 'New York City,' Sierra William's voice shook with emotion as she spoke about the toxic drug crisis in her community.'Death has been so normalized with our people — smallpox, residential schools, 60s Scoop, this has all led to trauma and tragedy in our communities,' said the Tŝilhqot'in Nation Youth ambassador.'Self care for us is doing things to connect us to our culture, to our ways of life. The exact things that were taken away from us through colonization.'William, who is from Xeni Gwet'in in 'B.C.'s' Nemiah Valley, was part of a Tŝilhqot'in delegation attending the UN Permanent Forum On Indigenous Issues last week.During a press conference, the group called for increased support from the federal and provincial governments to create Indigenous-led and culturally appropriate responses to the opioid crisis.The delegation also highlighted the Truth and Reconciliation Commission calls to action from 2015 and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People.'The Truth and Reconciliation calls to action outline what needs to happen to improve the health and wellness of our Indigenous peoples across Canada,' William said on April 24.'If the calls to action were to be realized, some of our people wouldn't have a reason to turn to drugs.'Jenny Philbrick, executive director of the Tŝilhqot'in National Government, said the nation declared a state of emergency over toxic drugs for all its six member communities more than a year ago.But now, she told attendees, there is renewed urgency.'As we were coming over a week ago, we got news that another one of our community members had passed from an overdose,' she said. 'And so we are here today to bring this issue back to the table.'Tŝilhqot'in Nation is one of many Indigenous communities across the country facing the brunt of the opioid crisis.In March, the Homalco First Nation on 'Vancouver Island' declared a state of emergency, saying four young people had died over six months from toxic drugs. The Nuu-chah-nulth Tribal Council also declared a state of emergency in all its 14 member communities in September.In 'British Columbia,' toxic drug overdoses are the leading cause of death for people aged between 10 and 59. According to the province, First Nations people are five times more likely to overdose than other residents and three times more likely to fatally overdose.'We know why there's a toxic drug crisis — there are so many different systemic reasons why we're going through what we're going through today,' said Philbrick.'We know what the solutions are. We need partners to come to the table and help us bring our solutions … and move forward in a good way.'Xeni Gwet'in Chief Roger William outlined a three-part plan involving the governments of 'Canada' and 'B.C.' but would allow Tŝilhqot'in Nation to deal with the issue 'in our own way.''We are in crisis,' he said. 'We want to make decisions for our own people.'William said, first, Indigenous communities must be given resources for their own recovery programs on the land such as equine therapy — including cultural and language teachings.Secondly, he said, First Nations must have the ability to safely exercise their voices in treatment spaces so it's easier to seek out help, since people still face discrimination and racism in the healthcare system. Lastly, William pointed to the housing issue and said he wants to find space for all First Nations to come together to talk about solutions.'The basic needs of our people must be met to stop our people from falling into using drugs,' he said.'If we can provide safe and secure housing for our people, then they have a place to come together with their families and get social support they need to overcome their addictions.'William added that 'some of the things are already happening' and said many young people are often out on the land with Elders and the nation often holds gatherings as they try to get closer to Tŝilhqot'in law and ways of life.'And a lot of these programs that we look at — it always goes back to that Tŝilhqot'in law, the land and our water,' he said. 'Those are really important to us.'Dakota Diablo, another Tŝilhqot'in Youth ambassador, said the public safety system in 'Canada' continues to fail Indigenous Peoples 'because it was never built for us.''We have our own traditional laws, values and systems of holding our people accountable,' he said.'How can our people seek help when structures meant to support our people cause so much harm?'IndigiNews requested comments from both the governments of 'B.C.' and 'Canada' but did not receive a response before publication.Philbrick said since Tŝilhqot'in declared a state of emergency last year, there has been some progress on addressing the issue, but 'we're needing more immediate resources' such as beds for people who are detoxing.'We have managed to hire a project manager and obtain property for the beginning of on the land training,' she said.'And we do have some solutions and some plans in place, but we … need immediate help in the meantime.'Tl'esqox Chief Francis Laceese, who is also the vice-chief of Tŝilhqot'in National Government, said change has been 'a slow process.' He said the nation recently met with the provincial government and is waiting to meet with the federal government after the recent election which has slowed things down.'Especially when you have a crisis — probably just not in our nation, but I think there are a lot of other nations that are in the same situation with us,' he said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israel recovers body of Thai farmworker in Gaza
Israel recovers body of Thai farmworker in Gaza

Boston Globe

timea day ago

  • Boston Globe

Israel recovers body of Thai farmworker in Gaza

Palestinian militants took dozens of Thai farmworkers hostage in the Oct. 7, 2023, attack. During a short ceasefire in November of that year, 23 Thai captives were released, and five more were freed during another ceasefire this year. Advertisement That ceasefire broke down and Israel resumed its offensive in Gaza against Hamas in mid-March with regular air bombardments and ground operations. On Saturday afternoon, the Gaza Health Ministry reported that the bodies of 95 people killed by Israeli attacks Thursday and Friday, the first day of the Muslim Eid al-Adha feast, had arrived at hospitals in addition to more than 300 wounded. The ministry does not distinguish between civilians and combatants in its casualty counts. Israeli officials have said the military was targeting militants and their weapons infrastructure. Over the past week, however, scores of hungry and desperate Palestinians have been killed and wounded on their way to collect boxes of food at an aid distribution site in Rafah operated by U.S. security contractors. Advertisement The site was set up as a part of a new Israeli-backed effort to deliver aid to Palestinians without Hamas benefiting. The effort has been boycotted by the United Nations and other prominent aid groups, which accuse Israel of using aid as a weapon. Israeli officials have argued that the new system was needed because Hamas was looting aid from trucks entering parts of Gaza where it still wields power. U.N. officials say there is little evidence that Hamas has systematically diverted aid. The Red Cross said its 60-bed field hospital in southern Gaza, a short distance from the distribution site in Rafah, had received a total of 40 bodies Sunday and Tuesday and 323 wounded people, most of whom had gunshot and shrapnel injuries and some of whom later died. On Saturday, Avichay Adraee, the Arabic-language spokesperson for the Israeli military, wrote on social media that gathering near distribution sites outside their hours of operation 'puts you in danger.' Some Palestinians have tried to advance in the line by taking shortcuts to the aid sites beyond the officially marked path, but people both on and off that path appeared to have come under fire, according to three witnesses. Broadcasts by Israeli drones told people arriving early to come back later, but many have ignored those calls, worried that they will lose their spot in line, the witnesses said. On Saturday evening, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation said it was 'impossible to proceed' with the distribution of aid on Saturday, accusing Hamas of threatening its operations without offering specifics. A spokesperson for the foundation later accused Hamas of threatening the lives of its Palestinian workers, but he did not provide evidence. Advertisement Separately, four Israeli soldiers were killed Friday and five were wounded when an explosive device was detonated in southern Gaza city of Khan Younis, according to Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin, the Israeli military's chief spokesperson. The soldiers had been operating in a Hamas compound when the explosion occurred, causing part of the structure to collapse, he added. The latest hostage retrieval brings the number of remaining living and dead captives believed to still be held in Gaza to 55. The Israeli government has said that up to 23 are believed to be alive. The recovery of Nattapong's body came after the Israeli military announced Thursday that security forces had retrieved the remains of two Israeli Americans who it said were also killed by the Mujahideen Brigades. The two victims, Judi Weinstein Haggai and Gadi Haggai, were in their 70s when they were killed. Israel believes the bodies of two other Thai citizens, Sonthaya Oakkharasri and Sudthisak Rinthalak, remain in Gaza, according to Yahel Kurlander, a sociologist who has been fighting for the release of Thai hostages. Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar updated his Thai counterpart, Maris Sangiampongsa, about the details of the operation to bring the Thai farmworker's body back to Israel, according to a statement from the Israeli Foreign Ministry. He was married and has a son, the ministry said. He had been in Israel for more than a year when he was taken hostage, and he was a strong personality who acted as a bridge between other Thai farmworkers at Nir Oz and employers, according to Josh Lawson, an official in the Israeli prime minister's office who deals with foreign hostages. Advertisement This article originally appeared in

Parents in Gaza are running out of ways to feed their children: ‘All we want is a loaf of bread'
Parents in Gaza are running out of ways to feed their children: ‘All we want is a loaf of bread'

Boston Globe

timea day ago

  • Boston Globe

Parents in Gaza are running out of ways to feed their children: ‘All we want is a loaf of bread'

But now she and her husband had two babies to keep alive at a time when Israel had blocked almost all aid from entering Gaza for nearly three months -- 80 days of total siege beginning in March. Israel began to ease the blockade in May, but only a thin trickle of supplies has arrived. Advertisement The traditional United Nations-run system for delivering aid has faltered as looters and fighting have cut off safe routes for aid trucks, and a new, Israeli-backed aid distribution system has descended into controversy, chaos and violence. Although the group behind it says it has delivered nearly 9 million meals so far, the United Nations says the assistance falls far short of what is needed for a population of 2 million people. Security at the new distribution sites is being provided by private American contractors, but the Israeli military is stationing forces nearby, outside the perimeter. Advertisement Born 5 pounds, 1 ounce, Shadia was weaker and smaller than her brother and had gained just 7 ounces a month later, her parents said. She struggled to suck from the bottle, usually drinking only half of the single bottle of formula that aid groups can offer at a time, they said. Al-Arqan has taken to drinking whatever her daughter does not finish, hoping the nutrients will help her produce milk, she said. 'Her birth brought me more anxiety than joy,' al-Arqan said. 'History is repeating itself, but this time with my little girl.' When al-Arqan managed to get some child nutritional supplements from an aid group in mid-May by waiting in line for six hours, aid workers evaluated Shadia by measuring her arm and concluded that the baby had moderate acute malnutrition, she said. But after nearly 20 months of war, Shadia's parents have no income or savings left to spend on milk or formula at the market. They survive on one meal a day: either a little lentil soup or rice and beans they get from charity kitchens in northern Gaza, where they have been living in a tent in the street for about six weeks. Barda, 26, who worked as a baker at a pastry chain before the war and has not been able to find steady work since, cannot find flour in northern Gaza for less than about $23 a kilogram, he said. That puts bread, the base on which practically every meal in Gaza used to be built, out of reach. Advertisement 'When we had Jihad, we still had some savings,' al-Arqan said. 'Now we have nothing -- no savings, no vegetables in the markets and no affordable flour.' Jihad's name, after an uncle, means 'struggle' or 'striving.' Jihad is no longer a baby. Now he asks constantly for food. A few days ago, as he was about to go down for a nap, al-Arqan said she heard him drowsily murmuring: 'Mama -- dough and bread.' 'Every day, we lose more ways to survive,' she said. 'My son is only asking for the bare minimum -- a loaf of bread. We're not asking for proper housing or clothes or even meat. All we want is a loaf of bread to stop the children's crying. Is that too much to ask?' Shadia is the apple of her grandfather's eye; he had always wanted a girl in the family. Sometimes he takes her to sleep with him and his wife on their mattress in their tent, he said, whispering words of hope and affection in his granddaughter's ears. Barda does not see cause for hope. Although he and his wife want more children, as is traditional in Gaza, they know they cannot feed more, he said. 'Our mood is broken,' he said. 'We go through the same suffering all over again every day.' To the south, in the city of Khan Younis, Hanaa al-Najjar has three children to feed, and little but lentils and dried pasta to feed them with. Advertisement The Times interviewed al-Najjar last year for the same article that described Barda and al-Arqan's struggle to feed their baby. Al-Najjar, now 31, had been left to take care of her children on her own after Israeli soldiers detained her husband as the family was evacuating a shelter on the Israeli military's orders, she said. After she ran out of formula, she was forced to feed her youngest, Muhanned, bread dipped in canned beans and lentil soup. His appetite suffered, and at less than 2 years old, he weighed half of what he was supposed to. He died in March 2024. Her elder son, Mohammed, now 8, had been hospitalized a few weeks before for fever and dehydration. Although he recovered, he has never been able to put on weight, al-Najjar said. He weighs a little less than 42 pounds -- underweight by World Health Organization standards. 'He never gains any extra weight like other kids,' she said. Now they live in a tent next to a graveyard in western Khan Younis. Al-Najjar's husband remains missing in detention. Without wheat flour, she grinds up dried lentils and pasta to make something resembling bread. Mohammed struggles to digest it, she said, and is always constipated. She has not found any medication to treat his bowel issues. For more than three months now, he has also had a bacterial infection on his scalp that doctors have been unable to treat, she said. It recently spread to his 10-year-old and 5-year-old sisters. Mohammed is a cheerful child. But the evidence of his rocky health is right there on the back of his head, even if he wears an orange hoodie to hide it. There, his dark hair has fallen out in patches, leaving nothing but an expanse of seething red skin. Advertisement This article originally appeared in

I don't like to be all alone'; Potlotek Dad's Group keeping men healthy
I don't like to be all alone'; Potlotek Dad's Group keeping men healthy

Hamilton Spectator

timea day ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

I don't like to be all alone'; Potlotek Dad's Group keeping men healthy

POTLOTEK - Potlotek First Nation member Louis Marshall and a few other men may have found a solution to staying healthy and it doesn't involve stereotypical male pursuits. A study released at the end of May by the Canadian Men's Health Foundation (CMHF) discloses that more Canadian men than ever are struggling with high levels of stress, and half of them lack the social support systems that would keep them from higher levels of depression or anxiety. According to a recent press release, the organization's data garnered from a survey taken in April, 2025 of 2,000 men across the country shows a significantly higher level of social isolation among men living alone (73 per cent), younger men aged 19-29 (67 per cent) and racialized men (59 per cent ). CMHF launched an initiative for the month of June called #NeverAlone – a national campaign focused on raising awareness and highlighting the importance of social connection during Men's Health Month. But that's no mystery to Marshall or the handful of other members of the 'Dad's Group' that meets every Friday morning in Potlotek. 'I don't like to be all alone during the day when my family is at school,' he says. 'Meeting here helps my anxiety.' Marshall's mother just passed away and he says it's been helpful to get out with others who support and listen to him. VARIETY OF ACTIVITIES Fellow group member, Russell Battiste says the Dad's Group is a good place to interact with other men, socialize and learn skills such as how to cook. With the help of facilitator and family resource worker Luz Blandon the group hosts different activities every week. The gatherings function as a place for men – and sometimes their children – to learn about such things as emergency preparedness, barbering, and especially – cooking. They say they will have more outdoor activities as the weather gets better, and hope to take on some arts and crafts projects. 'This group has been helping the men in many ways,' says facilitator Blandon. 'It has helped with socialization, support for what's going on in their lives, and isolation, We also are able to get them places they need to be if they don't have transportation.' The group plays bingo every month and has conversations at times about mental, physical and emotional health care. And their children are always welcome if it is a day off school. Two recent activities they engaged in were making pizzas from scratch to have lunch together and gathering with other community members one evening to decorate jackets for the Blue Jean Jacket Day in honour of murdered, missing and exploited Indigenous men and boys held annually on June 6. 'This group gives me something to do and something to look forward to,' says Louis Marshall. Winston Marshall has been attending the group for about a year. He says he likes being with people and especially learning more cooking skills and the good conversation he can find each week. 'I just keep asking other people what they want to do and ask them to come out to the group,' he says. Group members say everyone is open to suggestions from others about activities they would like to do or learn about. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store