| A real apology means you won't 
    do it again-- Coulter    March 07, 2008
    by:
    Robert Coulter
     Congress is considering an apology to American 
    Indians for the wrongs done by this country - forced relocation, takings of 
    lands, violating treaties, destroying sacred sites, and outlawing Native 
    religions and languages, to name a few. But a real apology means you won't 
    do it again - and there is the problem. 
 The federal government still takes Indian land without paying for it, still 
    fails to account for the Indian money it holds, still violates treaties with 
    Indian nations without making amends, and still maintains a body of law and 
    policy that is so discriminatory and racist that it should have been 
    discarded generations ago. To make a genuine apology, Congress needs to stop 
    doing the things for which it is apologizing.
 
 It is astonishing to most Americans that Congress and the administration are 
    still taking Indian land and resources - without due process of law and 
    without fair market compensation - sometimes with no compensation at all. 
    The Constitution says that Congress may not take anyone's property except 
    for a public purpose, with due process of law, and with fair market 
    compensation. But these rules are not applied to most land and resources 
    owned by Indian tribes, and the government takes the land and resources at 
    will. Obviously, this is wrong.
 
 A few years ago, Congress confiscated part of the Yurok Nation's reservation 
    in California and turned it over to another tribe. At the time, Congress 
    gloated that it could do this without paying compensation because of 
    ''plenary power,'' a concept that gives Congress complete power over Indian 
    affairs. This power has almost no constitutional limitations that protect 
    basic rights, and Indians are the only people in the United States subjected 
    to it.
 
 A good example of ongoing wrongs is how the government is trying to drive 
    Western Shoshone Indians off their homelands in Nevada without due process 
    and for a payment of about 15 cents per acre. This is gold-mining land (much 
    of it turned over for only $2.50 per acre to Canadian-owned companies) but 
    Indians derive no royalties from it, while being left virtually landless 
    with no means for economic development to improve their impoverished 
    conditions.
 
 In 2004, Congress passed a law that confiscates more than $145 million 
    belonging to nine Western Shoshone tribal governments and orders the 
    Interior Department to hand out the money to individual tribal members. The 
    bill was passed despite the objections of most Western Shoshone tribes, 
    because it violates their inherent right to self-governance and control over 
    their resources.
 
 Another glaring abuse of federal power is how the Interior Department still 
    does not account for billions in Indian funds that it holds. This national 
    shame is reported regularly in the press. The department is defying the law, 
    as it has done for years. The United States still insists that Indian 
    tribes, and in some respects Indian individuals, are in a state of 
    permanent, involuntary trusteeship, with the federal government as trustee. 
    No one else in the United States is subject to such unaccountable 
    ''trusteeship.''
 
 Congress today insists it can put Indian nations and tribes out of existence 
    at any time by terminating their rights. Indian nations and tribes still 
    have no real right to exist in U.S. law. The threat of termination is very 
    real. Some small Native tribes in Alaska have heard this threat from 
    congressional sources in recent years.
 
 Congress also insists that it may freely violate treaties made with Indian 
    nations. Sadly, this is not a thing of the past. Congress does this today - 
    regularly. Treaties are contracts, and the government cannot freely violate 
    its contracts with others, but it often does so in the case of Indian 
    treaties.
 
 The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights of the OAS, an international 
    legal body that is officially recognized and supported by the United States, 
    in 2002 concluded that U.S. policies regarding Indian lands are 
    discriminatory and constitute a violation of human rights. But the 
    administration is defying the commission and refusing to change the 
    discriminatory laws it applies to Indian tribes.
 
 This embarrassing state of affairs, this ongoing pattern of lawless and 
    arbitrary congressional power over Indians, has resulted in a negative, 
    risky, unpredictable business climate on Indian reservations that inhibits 
    needed economic development.
 
 Many of the things Congress is considering apologizing for are still being 
    done to Indians, Alaska Natives and to Native Hawaiians as well. Sadly, the 
    United States, especially Congress, has never given up its insistence on 
    treating Indian and Alaska Native nations with injustice and discrimination. 
    This is not only wrong, but very bad public policy and wholly out of keeping 
    with American values.
 
 So what should Congress do? In addition to an apology, Congress should 
    conduct hearings on these issues and adopt a resolution never again to take 
    Indian or tribal property without due process of law and fair market 
    compensation. The resolution should promise that Congress will never again 
    terminate any American Indian tribe or its government and never again 
    violate or abrogate a treaty with a Native nation without making full 
    compensation and correcting all resulting harm to that nation. Congress must 
    examine and change all federal laws, regulations and court-made law that 
    deprive Indian nations and tribes of constitutional rights. Congress must 
    pass legislation to assure that the government accounts fully for the Indian 
    money and property it holds.
 
 Indian nations have particular rights based on their existence as nations 
    since before the United States was created. But this does not mean that 
    these Native societies and governments should be punished by being deprived 
    of the fundamental constitutional rights that protect everyone in this 
    country from arbitrary government action. Indian nations should have at 
    least the same constitutional rights that all others in this country are 
    accorded.
 
 Until Congress corrects the grievous legal framework that applies to Indian 
    nations, tribal governments must work at a terrible disadvantage to battle 
    the deplorable poverty and social problems that afflict most Indian 
    communities. Government program funds and casinos cannot ever overcome the 
    fundamental legal injustice that Congress continues to inflict on Indian and 
    Alaska Native nations.
 
 Without such commitments from Congress, an apology will not be in good faith 
    and will have to be made over again. Until the government changes its ways, 
    things cannot be expected to improve much in Indian country. It is time to 
    make the changes.
 
 Robert Tim Coulter, founder and executive director of the Indian Law 
    Resource Center in Helena, Mont., and Washington, D.C., has practiced Indian 
    and human rights law for more than 30 years.
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