Supreme Court selection process unfair: Sinclair, Bellegarde
OTTAWA — Two leading First Nations voices say the government’s new Supreme Court of Canada selection process creates unfair barriers for indigenous candidates due to its “functionally bilingual” requirement.
Sen. Murray Sinclair, former chairman of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and Perry Bellegarde, national chief of the Assembly of First Nations, told The Canadian Press an indigenous appointment to the top court is long overdue and should be the government’s top priority.
Many indigenous people speak their own languages such as Cree or Mohawk, Bellegarde said, noting the ability to speak French and English should not stand in the way of appointing an indigenous person to the top court for the first time.
“I think that’s the greatest act of reconciliation, if the prime minister is serious about that, is to put an indigenous person … on to the Supreme Court of Canada because … they are going to bring that other perspective that it is not only common law and civil law — you have indigenous law, First Nations law that has to be incorporated into the justice system,” he said in an interview.


