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Interview 99 with Kevin D Annett
Kevin D Annett was born in Edmonton in 1956. Father of two children. He was adopted by the Anishinabe Indigenous Nation in Winnipeg in 2004 and given the name Eagle Strong Voice.
Educated at the University of British Columbia. Bachelor’s degree in Anthropology (1983); Master’s Degrees in Political Science (1986) and Divinity (1990).
Ordained as a minister of the United Church of Canada in May 1990. Held positions in Manitoba and downtown Toronto. Hired as minister of St. Andrew’s United Church in Port Alberni, July 1992. He expanded his congregation from ten members to nearly one hundred by 1993.
Kevin is fired without cause, notice or review by United Church officials on January 23, 1995, after exposing the murder of children at his church’s Alberni Indian residential school and his church’s theft of Ahousaht native land. Kevin is subsequently expelled from ministry without due process, loses his wife and children in a church-funded divorce, and is smeared and blacklisted by a joint Church-RCMP black ops campaign that continues to the present.
Kevin convenes the first human rights Tribunal into crimes in Canadian Indian residential schools, Vancouver, June 12-14, 1998, co-hosted by the UN affiliate IHRAAM. Based on the evidence revealed, the Tribunal recommends to the United Nations that Canada and its churches be charged with genocide. Under Canadian pressure, the UN refuses to act.
Kevin forms the first permanent inquiry into these crimes, The Truth Commission into Genocide in Canada in February 2000, and writes the first independent report on Genocide in Canada, “Hidden from History: The Canadian Holocaust” in January 2001.
Kevin commences a nation-wide campaign to document residential school crimes and organize the survivors, 2002-2005. He helps form the nation-wide Friends and Relatives of the Disappeared (FRD) on the first Aboriginal Holocaust Remembrance Day, April 15, 2005 in Vancouver. Launches public protests and occupations against the Canadian government and the Catholic, Anglican and United Churches in Vancouver, Winnipeg, and Toronto.
Kevin releases a documentary film “Unrepentant” in February 2007 which documents the uncensored record and evidence of deliberate genocide by Canadian Church and State in the Indian residential schools. That same month the Globe and Mail confirms Kevin’s claim of a fifty percent death rate in the schools. (“Children died in droves despite warnings to Ottawa”). Member of Parliament Gary Merasty watches Unrepentant and calls in the House of Commons for a Missing Children investigation.
Kevin publishes a list of twenty-two mass graves of children at former residential schools and holds mass occupations of the three guilty churches throughout the spring of 2008.
The government buckles: Kevin and the FRD force the “official apology” for Indian residential schools from the Harper government in July 2008. But Kevin is subsequently erased from any media reports, despite his official vindication and the validation of his claims about massive death rates and genocidal crimes in residential schools.
After being invited by church survivors to Europe, Kevin holds a public protest and exorcism at the Vatican, October 11, 2009; the next morning a tornado strikes Rome, and the first news reports appear linking Pope Benedict with child torture.
Kevin is invited by church survivors in Ireland to form the International Tribunal of Crimes of Church and State (ITCCS) in June 2010, and he is appointed its first Secretary.
ITCCS spreads to nine countries and launches protests and legal actions against the Catholic and other genocidal churches.
Kevin is invited by nine traditional Mohawk elders in Brantford, Ontario to excavate at a mass grave of children at the local Anglican school, February 2011. Dig commences that fall with elders’ approval. Children’s bones are uncovered and positively identified by forensic scientists in November 2011. Dig is shut down in January 2012 by government-allied “chiefs” and a false story smearing Kevin is circulated by them.
The International Common Law Court of Justice (ICLCJ) is convened by the ITCCS to charge Pope Benedict, Queen Elizabeth and 28 other defendants with committing and concealing Genocide, in July 2012. Kevin serves as the chief advisor to the Prosecutor.
Pope Benedict (Joseph Ratzinger) resigns from his office just before the ICLCJ verdict finds him guilty and sentenced to arrest and imprisonment in February 2013, after the Spanish government notifies Benedict that he could face arrest based on the ICLCJ evidence. Three other top Vatican officials named in the ICLCJ indictment also resign.
Based on his work, Kevin is nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by American scholars in 2014 and 2015. In 2016 he receives the coveted Prague Peace Award.
In January 2015 Kevin helps convene the first assembly of the Republic of Kanata in Winnipeg. The same month he begins a public radio program, Radio Free Kanata, which becomes Here We Stand. (ww
Category | News & Politics |
Sensitivity | Normal - Content that is suitable for ages 16 and over |
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