The 180

Encore: Indigenous governments need to protect freedom of the press

There are now dozens of First Nations in the process of negotiating modern treaties, which will create new, hybrid democracies. Reporter Wawmeesh Hamilton says that if these new democracies are to function, journalists covering them need to have their freedoms protected and enshrined.
Leaders of the Tla'amin Nation in B.C. celebrate their final treaty agreement in 2014. New treaties mean new forms of government — which Wawmeesh Hamilton says should also mean newly enshrined freedom of the indigenous press. (Tla'amin Nation)

This week the CRTC granted licenses to new indigenous radio stations in five cities across Canada.

That means Indigenous residents in Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Toronto, and Ottawa will soon have their own platform for broadcasting indigenous voices.

Earlier this year, The 180 aired a segment exploring issues around Indigenous self-determination and freedom of the press.

Wawmeesh Hamilton (Dan Toulgoet/Vancouver Courier)

Wawmeesh Hamilton, an Indigenous reporter in Vancouver, said a key to the success of new First Nation governments would be the enshrining of protections for Indigenous journalists.

The following essay previously appeared in The Tyee and on J-Source. 


Freedom of the press enables citizens to know about the things that public bodies do that impact them. It's what enabled me to report on civic affairs for a community newspaper for seven years. I reported about city taxes, school board decisions and regional district swearings-in of new First Nations members. If councillors or trustees gaffed, I asked why. 

The Parliament Building of the Nisga’a Nation. (Gary Fiegehen/Nisga’a Lisims Government)

I also saw how citizens were free to express their opinions in news stories and letters to the editor about issues that impacted them. I learned that freedom of the press benefits those who govern as well as it does those who are governed.

So as a journalist who also happens to be Indigenous, I'd like to think that those same freedoms apply in First Nations communities. I want journalists to have the same legal right to report on First Nations government meetings as they do to report on municipal, provincial, and federal ones. 

After months of speaking with lawyers, communities, and press advocates what I can say is that a lot of people don't want to talk about it. There is no legal precedent clarifying whether freedom of the press applies to First Nations.

After months of speaking with lawyers, communities, and press advocates what I can say is that a lot of people don't want to talk about it. There is no legal precedent clarifying whether freedom of the press applies to First Nations.- Wawmeesh Hamilton 

This is partly because journalists have never pressed the issue. They don't think it's important enough to clarify. 
To the mainstream, First Nations are small and remote, places where there's little of national importance at stake. 
And what editor wants the headache of taking a First Nation to court and potentially being painted a racist, picking on Indigenous people? 

This creates a chill effect.

But there is another reason media haven't made an issue out of freedom of the press and First Nations. 
Canada's constitutional adoption of freedom of the press in 1982 was uncontested. It's not something that was won through bloody war or skull-cracking protest. It comes up occasionally, such as the recent tapping of a Quebec reporter's cell phone by police, but it's not something that's sparks mass civil unrest. 

The first meeting of the Tsawwassen First Nation's legislature, in November 2009. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

There was plenty of coverage in B.C. of the Nisga'a, Maa-nulth and Tsawwassen treaties during negotiations. News coverage centred around the amount of land the tribes received, how much money is involved and what kind of access to resources there would be for private business interests. But no one was concerned with how democratic these new regimes would be. 

No journalist asked if freedom of the press would apply in the post-treaty world.

There are now dozens of First Nations in the process of negotiating modern treaties of their own. These new hybrid democracies will have their own legislatures, making decisions that impact the political, financial and social lives of their citizens. They'll also have influence on land and resource development adjacent to their treaty lands. They will be ostensibly operating on the same playing field as other government bodies but without the same independent oversight. As far as I can see, nothing is being done to ensure that these new democracies are in fact democratic.

These new hybrid democracies will have their own legislatures, making decisions that impact the political, financial and social lives of their citizens...As far as I can see, nothing is being done to ensure that these new democracies are in fact democratic.- Wawneesh Hamilton

Making space for freedom of the press would benefit both media and First Nations. For media, new access is an opportunity to really get to know a people that they, journalists, have too often inaccurately portrayed, reinforcing negative stereotypes.

For First Nations, allowing access means creating a portal through which the broader world can see and better understand them. This is also a chance to foster a media culture that facilitates citizens engaging with their governments, a chance not to just throw around the word democracy, but to exercise it.

Wawmeesh Hamilton is a reporter at Discourse Media. He is a member of the Hupacasath First Nation in Port Alberni, B.C.