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Nova Scotia Indigenous leader calls on Ottawa to move ahead with review of arrests

OTTAWA - An Indigenous leader is calling on Ottawa to begin an external review into why fisheries officers allegedly arrested two Mi’kmaq fishers in March 2024 and left them at a Nova Scotia gas station without shoes or phones.

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Nova Scotia Indigenous leader calls on Ottawa to move ahead with review of arrests

Former Fisheries minister Diane Lebouthillier rises during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, on Thursday, Nov. 7, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Spencer Colby


OTTAWA - An Indigenous leader is calling on Ottawa to begin an external review into why fisheries officers allegedly arrested two Mi’kmaq fishers in March 2024 and left them at a Nova Scotia gas station without shoes or phones.

Chief Gerald Toney of the Annapolis Valley First Nation told a news conference in Ottawa today there has been no movement on the file since then-fisheries minister Diane Lebouthillier called for the review on July 8.

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