Global Research News Hour - 01/21/13

Published: Jan. 22, 2013, midnight

b'\\u201cWe have had enough. Our young people have had enough. Our women have had enough \\u2026 we have nothing left to lose\\u2026 These are demands, not requests \\u2026 the Idle No More movement has the people, it has the people and the numbers that can bring the Canadian economy to its knees. It can stop Prime Minister Stephen Harper\\u2019s resource development plan.\\u201d\\n\\n-Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs Grand Chief Derek Nepinak\\n\\nIdle No More Re-visited\\n\\nThis past weekend, the long-awaited meeting between the Prime Minister and First Nations Chiefs took place in Ottawa. Not all of the First Nations leaders were in attendence.\\n\\nThe meeting took place the same week a devastating audit of the Attawapiskat First Nation was conveniently leaked. This audit served to distract the mainstream media and much of the public away from the core issues animating the Idle No More movement while smearing one of the movement\\u2019s most identifiable, and sympathetic figures.\\n\\nWhile Assembly of First Nations\\xa0Grand Chief Shawn Atleo recuperates from an illness, Idle No More protests have continued unabated, including on Wednesday January 16th\\u2019s National Day of Action which included rail and road blockades in Ontario, Manitoba and New brunswick.\\n\\nJohn Schertow is a Mohawk and Indigenous activist who has through his alternative news site\\u2018intercontinentalcry.org\\u2018 tracked and monitored hundreds of Indigenous Peoples\\u2019 struggles around the world. In this feature length interview, Mr. Schertow addresses the role of the Assembly of First Nations in Canada in relation to INM, what was accomplished during last Friday\\u2019s meeting with the Prime Minister, and what the movement can and should learn from other struggles if it is to prevail.\\n\\nHaiti\\u2019s Challenges\\n\\nOn January 12, 2010, a 7.0 MW earthquake with an epicentre 25 km west of Haiti\\u2019s capital Port-Au-Prince caused extensive damage to Port-Au Prince, Jacmel, and other settlements in the region. Hundreds of thousands were killed and over a million made homeless. THe world\\u2019s attention was riveted to the region. Concerned citizens in Western Europe, the US and Canada opened up their wallets and donated generously to NGOs, and institutions such as the International Committee of the Red Cross, believing they would be assisting the most needy and destitute Haitians.\\n\\nThree years, a cholera epidemic and 6 billion dollars in foreign aid later, Haiti still struggles to recover from that massive natural disaster. What are the essential impediments to the social and material reconstruction of this island nation?\\n\\nJean St-Vil, an Ottawa based writer, artist and activist has been to Haiti a few times since the quake. In part two of the program he comments on the forces undermining progress for Haiti, which he believes can be traced to the UN, and the international community at large, including Canada.'