The Assembly of First Nations (AFN), Canada's largest Aboriginal governance organisation, refutes Aglukkaq's assertion, noting that recently announced cuts to the federal health department will almost certainly force cuts to Aboriginal health funding in coming months, and that major programmes including the Aboriginal Diabetes Initiative, the Aboriginal Health Human Resources Initiative, the Aboriginal Youth Suicide Prevention Strategy, the Aboriginal Health Transition Fund, the Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder Program, the Maternal and Child Health Program, and the Blood Borne Diseases and Sexually Transmitted Infections/HIV/AIDS Program have recently been terminated.
The AFN argues that the rapid growth of Canada's Aboriginal population, and the growing prevalence of conditions like diabetes, hypertension, and depression, which are expensive to treat, necessitates health budget increases, rather than cuts. “These cuts are part of a systematic effort to dismantle Aboriginal health groups”, says Cindy Blackstock, executive director of the Ottawa-based First Nations and Family Caring Society. After taking office in 2006, she notes, the Conservatives terminated the Kelowna Accord, a multibillion dollar pact with over 600 Aboriginal groups to bolster health and social programmes. In 2007, the government withdrew health grants from the AFN and Blackstock's group after they filed legal claims over Aboriginals health inequities. Federal officials placed Blackstock under surveillance after she initiated legal action.