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Crown made a 'mockery' of treaty with 2 First Nations for 150 years, Supreme Court rules

For the past 150 years, the governments of Ontario and Canada have made a «mockery» of their treaty obligations to the Anishinaabe of the upper Great Lakes, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled Friday.

In a unanimous decision, the top court said the ongoing failure to increase the annual per-head resource extraction revenues since 1875 for the residents of two First Nations groups has undermined the honour of the Crown.

«For almost a century and a half, the Anishinaabe have been left with an empty shell of a treaty promise,» the ruling said.

«It is time for the parties to return to the council fire and rekindle the perpetual relationship that the Robinson treaties envision. Nothing less will demonstrate the Crown's commitment to reconciliation.»

The ruling does not award a settlement to the Huron or Superior Anishinaabe First Nations, but sets out the obligations of the Crown to negotiate an increase to resource revenues retrospectively, and into the future.

The case stretches back to 1850, when the Robinson-Huron and the Robinson-Superior treaties were signed between the Crown and the Anishinaabe of the upper Great Lakes.

As a part of the agreement, the Huron and Superior ceded more than 100,000 square kilometres of territory encompassing Thunder Bay, North Bay, Sault Ste. Marie and Sudbury, in exchange for an annual payment in perpetuity.

Under the Robinson-Huron treaty, each First Nation member received $1.70 per head a year. Under the Robinson-Superior treaty, the rate was $1.60 per person.

In 1875, that annual payment was increased to $4 per person, but since that time it had not increased.

'A mockery of the Crown's treaty promise'

«Today, in what can only be described as a mockery of the Crown's treaty promise to the

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