Babaamaajimowinan (Telling of news in different places)
Sorted by date Results 26 - 35 of 35
Looking Back to 2013 - Red Lake Boys & Girls Club Carnival...
Looking Back to 2013 - Red Lake Clean Up Day...
Looking Back to 2012 - Child Abuse Prevention Walk...
Looking Back to 2012 - Red Lake Girls Softball Vs. Laporte...
Looking Back - Red Lake Police and Fire Department Honor Banquet...
Looking Back: Red Lake Embassy Open House Minneapolis...
Cases of the novel coronavirus among Native Americans have been growing faster than some of the worst-hit states in the country. Nearly 8,000 cases have been reported but the actual number of infections is likely to be higher, with less than three percent of the total Native American population tested for the virus. Many of the country's over 2.9 million Native Americans have health risks, such as diabetes, heart disease, cancer and obesity, that are higher than other Americans, making them more vulnerable to novel coronavirus infection....
President Donald Trump said Thursday "we're not closing our country" if the U.S. goes through a second wave of the coronavirus. It comes as more than 94,000 people in the U.S. have died from COVID-19, but nearly 39 million Americans have lost their jobs in the effort to stop the virus. The president, touring a Ford plant in Michigan, indicated that decisions made early on to promote social distancing have worked to keep the death toll from being much higher than it is now. https://www.wusa9.com/article/news/health/coronaviru...
Casamero Lake (United States) (AFP) - Weeks of delays in delivering vital coronavirus aid to Native American tribes exacerbated the outbreak, the president of the hard-hit Navajo Nation said, lashing the administration of President Donald Trump for botching its response. Jonathan Nez told AFP in an interview that of the $8 billion promised to the United States' tribes in a $2.2 trillion stimulus package passed in late March, the first tranche was released just over a week ago. https://news.yahoo.com/trump-bungled-pandemic-re...
The Independent Investigation Unit is clearing a pair of Manitoba First Nations Police Service officers of wrongdoing in the shooting death of Ben Richard, 23, on Long Plain First Nation last spring. The civilian director of the IIU, Zane Tessler, concluded that the use of lethal force by the two MFNP officers was "justified, unavoidable and necessary" to prevent any further death or injury to the public. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/manitoba-first-nation-police-shooting-ben-richard-1.5577905...