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Rwandans in Canada to vote for president

TORONTO - John Rukumbura will travel more than 450 kilometres next week just to cast a single vote in the Rwandan elections, in the hopes that it will contribute to democracy in his homeland.

Preparations are in full gear for Rwandans inside and outside the country to contribute to the nation's democratic cause by voting for the country's president for just the second time after the 1994 genocide. Dissident voices still doubt a democratic process is in place.

To vote in Canada, Rwandans will have to travel to Rwanda's High Commission office in Ottawa, where the polling station will be.

Rukumbura, who lives in Brampton, Ont., northwest of Toronto, will be making the trek on Aug. 8 because he says the diaspora's vote might be minimal, but symbolically important in a young democracy like Rwanda.

"Rwanda has achieved a lot in the last 16 years," he said. "We need to develop a healthy democracy and participating in the voting process is a step into the right direction."

Neither the government nor the embassy will provide transport for those going to vote, so it will prove to be a challenge depending on where people live across Canada. But it also serves to show the determination to contribute to the democratic process and make one's voice count, Rukumbura said.

"Rwandans here understand why this is important and are actually excited about the elections and ready to take up the challenge," he said.

Four candidates are currently vying for the highest office, while three aspirant opposition figures have failed to field their candidacy.

One is in prison accused of divisionism, another is under house arrest awaiting trial for terrorism and divisionism charges, while the third has repeatedly failed to organize his party's first general assembly.

The 2010 presidential elections will take place in Rwanda on Aug. 9. They are organized and overseen by an independent National Electoral Commision.

Candidates include incumbent President Paul Kagame of the ruling party, Rwanda Patriotic Front, who has been in power over the last decade and won an overwhelming 95 per cent of the votes in the 2003 presidential polls.

No figures were readily available from Rwanda's High Commission in Canada as to how many Rwandans have been registered to vote in Canada.

But statistics from Rwanda's NEC show there are 24,799 Rwandans who live in the diaspora — 87.7 per cent of whom have reached the voting age and almost all of them have fulfilled the conditions to take part in the electoral process.

Voting requirements include having a valid national ID or passport.

The commission has given members of the diaspora a chance to vote one day before the election to allow enough time for their voting results to be forwarded in Kigali on time before final publication of poll results.

Kagame's challengers include deputy-speaker of parliament Jean Damascene Ntawukuliryayo of the Social Democratic Party, vice-President of Senate Prosper Higiro of the Liberal Party and a sole female candidate Alvera Mukabaramba.

Mukabaramba ran against Kagame in 2003 but dropped out of the race just days shy of the voting date, giving all her support to him.

Events leading up to this year's elections have left opponents of the Kagame regime worried of how free and fair the process will be.

A series of grenade explosions rocked the capital city late January and early February, killing and injuring ordinary citizens. An American law professor was arrested, jailed and later released on bail over genocide denial charges. A former army chief of staff survived an assassination attempt in June after he fell out with Kagame and fled to South Africa.

An independent journalist was shot dead in late June in Kigali. His newspaper, along with another tabloid, both critical of the Kigali regime, were shut down by the government media regulatory body. An official from the yet-to-be-registered Rwanda Green Party, was killed in the south of Rwanda in mid-July.

Kigali persistently denied any involvement and police carried out investigations. Suspects have been arrested and some pleaded guilty. But critics like Gallican Gasana are not convinced.

"There is no political space," said the Rwandan living in Brampton, Ont.

Gasana, a permanent secretary general of the AMAHORO-People's Congress political party operating in exile, said he won't vote, just as he didn't in 2003. He accused Kagame of "running a one man show" and using his long-term subordinates as "stooge" candidates to portray a "fake" democratic facade.

"Even when they are campaigning, none of them dares criticize Kagame or show how they'll overdo him."

Rwanda has not seen a lot of democratic voting in the past. After obtaining independence from Belgium in 1962, the country went through ethnic-stricken hatred, forcing many to remain refugees in neighbouring countries and across the globe.

In 1973, army general Juvenal Habyarimana ousted the then-civilian president in a military coup and established a one-party regime where he would be a unique candidate.

Habyarimana was killed in April 1994 and a genocide against ethnic Tutsi took place, which would claim as many as a million lives and would be stopped by the RPF rebels, led by Paul Kagame.

It would take at least nine years for the transitional government to organize the first pluralist elections. Only two independent candidates tried to challenge Kagame in 2003 and unsuccessfully so, while all political parties rallied behind him and his RPF.

If he wins the upcoming elections, Kagame will be entering his final seven-year constitutional mandate in office.

Critics and rights watchdogs have accused him of running an authoritarian regime that tolerates no dissent, but the Kigali government continuously dismisses the allegations, insisting instead on economic strides and a relatively peaceful environment that have been on the raise and brought praise over the last 16 years.


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Two boaters rescued from Bay of Fundy

PORTAUPIQUE, N.S. - Two men from Dartmouth, N.S., have been rescued from the Minas basin after they were reported missing on Friday.

RCMP and the coast guard were called in when the men failed to return to their cottage in the Portaupique, N.S., area.

The boaters, aged 42 and 50, had gone out in a four-metre inflatable boat but their motor died.

They were found around 11 p.m. off Economy Point and transported, uninjured, back to shore by a coast guard vessel.

(CKTY)


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Marriage means loss of vote, loss of homes

COLD LAKE, Alta. - They were born and raised on the Cold Lake Indian reserve in northeastern Alberta, as were their parents and grandparents.

But the women — who are status Indians — are not allowed to live there, nor may they vote for chief or council.

Why? Because they married non-aboriginal men.

Until 1985, if an aboriginal woman married a non-native man, she lost her status as an Indian and all the rights that went with it. A man who married a non-native woman kept his status.

That year the federal government amended the Indian Act with Bill C-31 to fix the inequity.

But the law hasn't helped Agnes Gendron, Nancy Scanie, Lillian Shirt or thousands of other aboriginal women across Canada who still are known as "C-31s."

They and their children have been kicked off reserves and cannot get access to schools, medical or other services available to those living on reserve. And they can't vote out those who don't recognize them.

"For all intents and purposes, they have lost their treaty rights, which are valuable," says lawyer Randy Fowle, who took on Scanie's case pro bono.

This past June, the Cold Lake First Nations held an election for chief and council. Gendron, 67, was not allowed to vote, just has she has been unable to vote in any election for years. Every three years, when an election is held, she tries to get on the voters' list. Every year she gets a letter that tells her this:

"While you have met the majority of criteria, your request has been denied based upon the following: Cold Lake First Nations abides by a Custom Election Law dated May 27, 1986 which does not include nor exclude persons reinstated under Bill C-31; and Cold Lake First Nations has traditionally excluded persons reinstated under Bill C-31."

Gendron has filed letters of protest, but they go unanswered.

"When I was growing up, people used to come home from wherever they lived to vote, and it was a happy occasion when everybody came home to vote for chief and council," Gendron said.

"In 1979 (band officials) said people living off the reserve couldn't vote. When Bill C-31 came in, they said that only the ones living on the reserve and in a 30-mile radius could vote. I'm only six miles from the reserve and I can't vote," says Gendron, who is the executive director of the Grand Centre Native Friendship Centre.

Scanie, 71, a residential school survivor, has been trying for several years to get her rights as a band member restored. The Cold Lake First Nations tells her she is "Bill C-31."

She lived on a beach in a tarp shack for 18 months, and she lived in her dead son's home on the reserve, taking care of her grandchildren. The band cut off power and heat in the winter to try to force her off the reserve. Three years ago, at age 68, she built a small log cabin on the reserve. It has power, but no water and she must use an outhouse.

"I showed them the letter from Ottawa that said I never lost my rights. They said the letter wasn't good enough for them."

Chief Cecil Janvier did not return repeated calls this week to discuss the issue. Councillors Bernice Martial, Judy West and Roger Marten refused to comment, and others did not return calls.

A request for an interview with a representative of the Assembly of First Nations was not returned. Jeannette Corbiere Lavell, president of the Native Women's Association of Canada, could not be reached for comment.

"They've basically been neglected, ignored, discriminated against with no consequences in so far as a breach of the Canadian Charter of Rights is concerned," says Fowle.

"She's born there, she's no less First Nations or native than any male living on that reserve. You talk about abject discrimination, this has got to be it. No compassion at all."

Fowle says he and Scanie have tried to persuade the band to be fair, but says they wasted their breath. "They can breach the law with impunity," he says. "Basically, (the band) is thumbing their nose at the federal law."

Fowle, who has been practising law for more than 40 years, said the bands don't comply with the law because they aren't forced to do so. The federal government allows them to go on breaking the law and contravening the Charter, year after year, because it doesn't have the will, he says.

He believes an easy way to get the chief and council of Cold Lake First Nation to comply would be if Ottawa made funding conditional on reinstating these women's rights.

"There should be consequences of flouting the law. For the rest of us, we flout the law, there's going to be consequences. But they're a law unto themselves on the reserve," he says.

"If you don't obey our laws, why should you benefit from them?"

A spokeswoman for the Department of Indian Affairs said the Cold Lake First Nations chooses its leaders through a customary selection process, which falls outside the purview of the Indian Act.

"The department has no role to play in how the community's leadership is selected or how governance disputes are resolved," Margot Geduld said from Ottawa.

That means chief and council are left to decide who may vote and who may not, based on whatever criteria they choose. Any First Nation with a "Custom Code" only has to submit the names of the new chief and council to the federal department. It is not required to reveal how many people cast ballots.

If a band does not recognize a person as a band member, that individual can go through the courts or to the Canadian Human Rights Commission or can register a complaint with Indian Affair's allegations and complaint section, says Geduld.

Fowle says he has told other women in the same position as Scanie and Gendron to forget legal action.

"You're running into a brick wall here. It's a complete waste of time. If we can't persuade the council morally, legally you have no redress."

— By Mary Jo Laforest in Edmonton


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No jackpot winner in Lotto Max

TORONTO - No one has the winning ticket for the $50-million jackpot prize in Friday night’s Lotto Max draw.

However, 13 of the 28 MaxMillion prizes of $1-million each were either won or shared.

Winning tickets for MaxMillion prizes were purchased in British Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, and Atlantic Canada.<

The jackpot for the next Lotto Max draw on August 6th remains at $50-million — but there will also be 32 MaxMillion prizes.

---


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U.S. tourist rescued at Niagara Falls

NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. - A tourist from New Hampshire will be spending the rest of his honeymoon in a cast after falling into the Niagara River just above the Horseshoe Falls.

Niagara Parks Police say the 43-year-old from Londonderry fell about three metres down a steep embankment while trying to get a picture of the falls.

The man, a paramedic, was unable to help himself as he had fractured his right leg in the fall.

Officers were able to climb down to water level and assist the victim, who was just 200 metres above the falls.

He was transported to hospital in Niagara Falls and admitted.

Sgt. John Clark says the officers last saw the man apologizing profusely to his new wife.


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