FSIN looking to warn international business away from Saskatchewan
At the same time First Nations and natural resources are at the forefront of many minds, the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations (FSIN) is looking to warn international resource business away from Saskatchewan.
The province has been making a hard push toward more trade, and has been opening international offices, going on trade missions, and trying entice international investment, often with an eye toward the province’s natural resources.
The FSIN has been fighting over land and resource rights and treaty rights for years, and said that during these trade trips the province has been misleading foreign industry leaders about who really owns the resources in Saskatchewan. Investors, the federation said, shouldn’t come to the province to extract natural resources.
“I think (potential investors) should be concerned and that their investments are unstable when you’re looking at the instability and the unrest in this region when it comes to land and minerals,” explained FSIN Vice-Chief Heather Bear.