Thursday, October 29, 2009

Legal Public Notice

LEGAL PUBLIC NOTICE

BE IT WITNESSED AND NOTICE: For the ominayak and for the Maxkw-Wun of the musk-kate-teew-sagahigan-eno-wuk,: Wilps-Daaxan and: ka-wi-moah-us-ki are private people. We are with the claim of our sons and daughters and holders of our culture, and spoken-mantra. We are with the claim of the freedom of the travel on our mother-earth and the stewards of our sacred lands of the tear-drop. We are with the claim of the stewards of our renewable and non-renewable resources surface and sub-surface and all watersheds for the benefit of all our [tribal] people of mother-earth by the authority of the musk-kate-teew-sagahigan-eno-wuk, wilps-daaxan,: ka-wi-moah-us-k and all sovranallies of Her Majesty In Council of Great Britain. FURTHER TAKE NOTICE for the ominayak and for the Maxkw-Wun are with the copyright claim of the TRADE NAMES AND TRADEMARKS OF BERNARD ALBERT OMINAYAK SR. ©™, LUBICON LAKE INDIAN BAND # 453 ©™ and LITTLE BUFFALO ©™ by the authority of the people of the musk-kate-teew-sagahigan-eno-wuk,: Wilps-Daaxan and ka-wi-moah-us-ki. For the ominayak and for the Maxkw-Wun are with the claim of the Agents of the Alberta Personal Property Registration Numbers: 09042909775 & 09042910048 and the Washington DC Uniform Commercial Code Filing Numbers: 2009044105, 2009044041, 2009044044, 2009044034, 2009043992, 2009044224 by the authority of the Agents on behalf of the secured party BERNARD ALBERT OMINAYAK©. For any names resembling the above TRADE NAMES, AND TRADEMARKS in any form with-in any derivation thereof REMAINS THE EXCLUSIVE PROPERTY OF THE AUTHORIZED REPRESENTATIVE FIR THIS PERMANENT LEGAL PUBLIC NOTICE. WETHE AGENTS ON BEHALF OF THE SECURED PARTY HEREBY RESERVES ALL OUR RIGHTS WITH PREJUDICE AND THE TRADE NAMES CANNOT BE REPRODUCED BY ANY MEANS WITHOUT OUR PRIOR WRITTEN CONSENT. For the ominayak and for the Maxkw-Wun are with this Claim of Right by the authority of the ominayak and for the Maxkw-Wun. Any infringement of the TRADE NAMES AND TRADEMARKS will Constitute a default of the contracts and the issue of a True Bill in the amount of $1,000,000.00 of gold-bullion for each use of the said TRADE NAMES /TRADE MARKS by the authority of the Secured Party’s Agents: Maxkw-Wun and for the ominayak. For the people of the musk-kate-teew-sagahigan-eno-wuk, ,: Wilps-Daaxan and: ka-wi-moah-us-ki are with the acceptance for value of the Magna Carta of 1215, Queen Anne’s Order In Council of 1704, King George III Royal Proclamation of 1763, Lord Dufferin’s Order in Council of 1875, Jay Treatise of 1794 by the authority of the musk-kate-teew-sagahigan-eno-wuk,: Wilps-Daaxan and: ka-wi-moah-us-k and all our sovran allies of Her Majesty in Council of Great Britain. Further Take Notice: We, the people of the musk-kate-teew-sagahigan-eno-wuk, ,: Wilps-Daaxan and: ka-wi-moah-us-ki are with the claim of the TRANSCANADA TRUE BILL REGISTRATION # RW293121888CA: POST MARKED: NOVEMBER 6, 2008 WITH THE VALUE OF USD 557,738,500.00 (GOLD) USD OF FUNCTIONAL FIAT CURRENCYOF FUNCTIONAL FIAT CURRENCY. THE ALBERTA ULITIES COMMISSION ORDERS DATED OCTOBER 10, 2008 IS HEREBY ACCEPTED FOR VALUE AND OFFER FOR CONTRACT IS HEREBY REFUSED WITHCAUSE AND NOT DISHONORED. THE TRANSCANADA LICENCES AND PERMIT NUMBERS: 19611AND 14134 (APPLICATION) ARE HEREBY DISALLOWED BY THE AUTHORITY OF THE musk-kate-teew-sagahigan-eno-wuk, ,: Wilps-Daaxan and: ka-wi-moah-us-ki. We further claim our LEGAL PUBLIC NOTICES WHICH RAN IN THE KEREMEOS REVIEW NEWSPAPER, KEREMEOS, BRITISH COLUMBIA ON SEPTEMBER 25, OCTOBER 2 AND OCTOBER 9, 2008 AND THE RECORD GAZETTE, PEACE RIVER, ALBERTA ON OCTOBER 14, 2008, WITH NOTARIAL NON-RESPONSES. THE FAILURE TO RESPOND BY ALL THIRD PARTIES TO THE LEGAL PUBLIC NOTICES ARE HEREBY ACCEPTED FOR VALUE AND THE ALBERTA PPSA AND WASHINGTON D.C. UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE LIENS CANNOT BE DISCHARGED BY THE ALBERTA PERSONAL PROPERTY REGISTRAR, NOR BY ANY BANKRUPTCY COURT OF CANADA AND WASHINGTON D.C. We, further accept for value the ALBERTA sic AND BRITISH COLUMBIA sic longitude (sic) and latitude (sic) by the people of the musk-kate-teew-sagahigan-eno-wuk.,: wilps-daaxan,: ka-wi-moah-us-ki,: Musgamawg,: Kwaguilth-Nak’azdli-Haada-laas,: Haida-Gwaii,: sinpinqtin,: sukinaqin,: smelqmix,: spaximon,: gitim-dan,: kwagiulth, Anhisnabe-Aki,: esens, shishalh-yl’extl’ax’min,: nuu-chalh-nulth,: skomesh and: nadleh’whuten are with the claim of the reservation of all our rights with prejudice by the authority of the Agents of the Sovran Covenant Keepers and Royal Allies of Her Majesty.

ALL INQUIRIES/CONCERNS by writing a Jurat Affidavit to

: ominayak./: Maxkw-Wun.: Authorization Reps./: spokesmen.

C/o: NOTARY PUBLIC

FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON PO BOX 1819 OROVILLE WA 98844

St. Vincent Memories

St. Vincent Memories

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Lubicon Nations Needs Your Help Call 780 920 1046

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HGSpyQ5m4Bg
http://www.lubicon.ca/pa/action.htm


While the Lubicon Nation tries to negotiate a settlement of Lubicon land rights with the federal and Alberta governments, the Alberta Government authorizes more and more oil and gas wells and pipelines within Lubicon Traditional Territory.
Needs Food, Water and Legal Assistance

17809201046 See Wee


musk-kate-teew-sagahigan-eno-wuk./: Wilps-Daaxan


Hello All, Our relatives , in northern Alberta need help as they are cut off there not having any food and water rations.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwn3RMRA3nw


[ http://www.gasandoil.com/goc/news/ntn52115.htm]

and [ http://www.dominionpaper.ca/original_peoples/2005/04/28/no_lifeblo.html ]

They have asked us to help spread the word and see if we can help. If you know of any people or groups that assist please send them the message of need for this.


We have requested the Province of Alberta to supply emergency welfare to help but this is only for 1 month. Please let me know and please pass the word to others that may have connections to help they may call: sewepagaham 1-780-920-1046

for : ominayak:

the first can be pronounced cee-wee for short,as he is handling the calls coming in for tribal people there

Thank you


Issue 28 Section:

Oil Lubicon nation fights oil companies, governments for survival by Kim Petersen The Dominion -


When the abundance of resources -- in particular, heavy oil -- became apparent on Lubicon traditional territory, the Alberta provincial government began to sell the resource rights to multinational corporations. The exploitation of the unceded territory of the Lubicon Lake First Nation continues unabated. By 2002, over 1,700 well sites and several kilometers of pipelines had been constructed on Lubicon land. In August 2004, Alberta granted oil sands exploration leases to Calgary-based Deep Well Oil and Gas reported to encompass over 101 square kilometers in Lubicon traditional territory. The development has not been without impact on the Lubicon. A short time ago the Lubicon subsisted from the land. The Ottawa-based group Outaouais Lubicon Solidarity describes the change: "Between 1979 and 1983, annual trapping income dropped 90%. The number of moose killed for food dropped 90% and the number of people on welfare jumped from 10% to over 90%." They say the federal and Alberta governments are complicit in undermining the Lubicon Lake First Nation. The Alberta government, says the group, rejected the Lubicon land registry claim, denied the Lubicon nation's existence, belittled the Lubicon as "merely squatters on provincial Crown land" without aboriginal rights, declared the Lubicon community at Little Buffalo to be "an official provincial hamlet," threatened to bulldoze Lubicon homes (but later backed down), sent in RCMP to forcibly dismantle Lubicon barricades on their territory, negotiated the size of a Lubicon reserve in the Grimshaw Accord, and then backed out of the accord. The federal government has taken similar actions. They are accused of manipulating the Lubicon Band membership list, negotiating by "take-it-or-leave-it" offer, suppressing a federal inquiry report favourable to the Lubicon, resorting to chicanery in Lubicon elections, and financing clear-cut logging operations by neighboring bands within Lubicon traditional territory. Criticism of the governments' respective roles abounds. The World Council of Churches decried the potential "genocidal consequences" of actions by the Alberta provincial government and oil corporations. The Canadian government was urged to take "immediate action." In 1987, the United Nations Human Rights Committee asked Canada "to take interim measures of protection to avoid irreparable damage" to the Lubicon Lake First Nation while it investigated. In March 1990, the commission declared that "recent developments threaten the way of life and culture of the Lubicon Lake Cree and constitute a violation of Article 27 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights..." The federal government's own Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples (RCAP) concluded the solution to First Nations' territorial woes was simple: they required a greater share of the lands and resources to survive. In 1998, the United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights iterated the RCAP solution and urged "concrete and urgent steps to restore" land and resources to Original Peoples. Amnesty International was alarmed and demanded respect for Canada's Original Peoples. Scandal-plagued Prime Minister Paul Martin gave his assurance of being "committed to a just settlement of this [Lubicon] land claim �" Kevin Thomas, a negotiator with the Lubicon Lake First Nation responded, "It's not the first time that we've heard that. Every PM for the last twenty years has said it. � Obviously we're a little cynical when someone makes that statement and doesn't back it up with action." Deep Well Oil and Gas, Surge Global Energy, Welwyn Resources, and Paradigm Oil and Gas have announced a plan to extract almost 820 million barrels of oil through as many as 512 wells in Lubicon territory. The Lubicon Lake First Nation with environmental NGOs Sierra Club of Canada and Greenpeace asked Canadian Environment Minister Stephane Dion to initiate a federal environmental review of the oil sands project. Lubicon Chief Bernard Ominayak said "We believe that it is irresponsible to allow this development to proceed without first dealing with the unresolved jurisdictional issues regarding these lands and without an independent assessment of the environmental, social and economic impacts of this project." Ominayak expressed concern about harm to the lake fisheries, the depletion and contamination of water resources, and the unknown impacts of massive steam injections into the sensitive boreal muskeg ecosystem. The effects of potential air pollution, litter, contaminated wastes, and climate change on the flora and fauna, culture, and Lubicon "way of life" were also pressing concerns cited by Ominayak. Deep Well and its associates, have so far been unresponsive to Lubicon requests for discussion except briefly in response to a Lubicon blockade that reportedly cost the companies $100,000 a day. In a late response to The Dominion, Deep Well said that "Legal ownership and beneficial title to the land involved is with the Province of Alberta." Thomas paraphrased the Lubicon resistance to co-optation: "Oil companies typically think they can wave some money around and people will jump. The Lubicon community needs money; they don't even have running water at this point. But their first question isn't how much money they can make -- it's what's this going to do to their land and their way of life." Ominayak's message is urgent: "I hope people will understand we're trying to survive from day to day and need all the help we can get from the general public. It's a battle against time."
Mission to Canada
- Final Report of the UN Special Rapporteur on Adequate Housing
Friends of the Lubicon
PO Box 444 Stn D,
Etobicoke ON M9A 4X4
Tel: (416) 763-7500
Email: fol (at) tao (dot) ca www.lubicon.ca
March 11, 2009
Located here for your information is a copy of the recently released Final Report of the UN Special Rapporteur on Adequate Housing regarding his October 2007 mission to Canada. Points 74-76 of Section VII (Aboriginal Peoples' Right to Adequate Housing) pertain specifically to the Special Rapporteur's field visit to Lubicon Territory and previous UN decisions regarding violation of the human rights of the Lubicon people by the UN Human Rights Committee (HRC) and the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR) under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Section 76 points out that "various extractive industries -- such as the TransCanada Pipeline ...seem in contradiction with (UN) treaty bodies' recommendations and the right to self-determination and control over natural resources...and have a direct impact on the human rights" of the Lubicon people. See also point 107 in Section X (Recommendations) which calls on Canada to place "a mortatorium...on all oil and extractive activities in the Lubicon region until a settlement" of Lubicon land rights is achieved and that "activities of private companies on Aboriginal lands -- regardless of the status of the claim -- should be carried out only with consultation and approval (underlining added) of all Aboriginal and concerned communities". To receive timely e-mail updates on the Lubicon situation, please send an e-mail with the word subscribe in the subject line to fol-request at masses.tao.ca