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Former WFN chief recounts tales from his Ukraine business life

Ron Derrickson writes about larceny and greed among Ukraine 91Ƶscorpions91Ƶ
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Ron Derrickson saw Ukraine as a massive economic opportunity after he set foot in the country for the first time more than 20 years ago.

His initial visit to the Eastern Europe country was to be a friend91Ƶs best man at his wedding.

But that visit turned into the start of a whirlwind business adventure for the controversial former Westbank First Nation chief that came to a halt due to government corruption and the current Russia-Ukraine war.

91ƵI was there initially for my friend Darryl91Ƶs wedding, but after he got married and went on his honeymoon, I was there wondering what to do next for the rest of my holiday, 91Ƶ Derrickson recalled.

But his entrepreneurial mindset began to recognize business potential.

91ƵIt was like a great big, massive Indian reserve free for all out there. There were business opportunities everywhere.91Ƶ

Derrickson has written his third book about his experience in Ukraine, titled Ukrainian Scorpions: A Tale of Larceny and Greed.

The book tells not only the story of his personal battles in political and diplomatic spheres, including a run-in with automatic weapon-toting mercenaries but also the wider struggle of Ukraine to find its footing and shake off the corruption that has plagued the nation since gaining its independence from Russia in the 1990s.

Derrickson writes about watching the invasion of Ukraine with a kind of anguish, a country that has been shut out of the European economic union for three decades and is now being asked to ward off an invasion by Russia without any military manpower support, an over-matched country in a fight for its very existence.

91ƵWhat the Russians are doing to the people of Ukraine is criminal, and Putin is a war criminal,91Ƶ said Derrickson.

91ƵIt is absolutely genocide that is going on there right now.91Ƶ

With his own Indigenous background, Derrickson said he has empathy for what Ukrainians are facing from the Russian military backlash.

91ƵThe Ukraine people are basically good, kind, happy people, normal everyday people and I love them,91Ƶ he said.

91ƵUnfortunately, there was corruption in government at all levels. It is a beautiful country you know, great people. It91Ƶs just too bad there have been criminals who run it. 91Ƶ

Derrickson said his initial business foray was in buying apartments, then upgrading and selling them. His real estate business led him into agriculture investment, buying and leasing farmland.

He stepped up his agriculture business interests by importing the latest grain sorting equipment from Canada and a facility to house it, which put him on the radar of government tax collectors and Ukrainian oligarchs.

91ƵThey just slowly bleed you to death until you are done and they then take over your business, falsify documents and put you into bankruptcy,91Ƶ Derrickson recalled.

91ƵIt91Ƶs too bad because if Ukraine had joined NATO early on, the system of justice and government in the country would have been more proper. There is only one way to run a government and that is honestly.91Ƶ

Derrickson has since relocated to Poland, seeing the potential there he saw decades ago in Ukraine.

91ƵPoland is one of the most developed and prosperous countries in Europe right now, while Ukraine is now one of the poorest. Poland is stable right now,91Ƶ he said, noting he and business partners have spent thousands of dollars helping get people out of the country to evade persecution.

91ƵEverywhere you go in Poland, you find Ukrainian people working in stores. But I think it91Ƶs a fair assessment that those people would go back to Ukraine.

91ƵThey are so homesick for Ukraine, but I know they can91Ƶt do that right now while the war is going on.91Ƶ

While often travelling abroad, Derrickson says returning to Kelowna always renews his appreciation for what we have here.

91ƵPeople who complain here and live off the government should be ashamed of themselves. We have got everything we need in this country.91Ƶ

While his business pursuits have led to a fascinating life for Derrickson, at the age of 82 he has no interest in slowing down.

Born on the Westbank Indian Reserve in 1941, as a young man Derrickson worked as a fruit picker, welder and rancher before being elected the band chief in 1976.

Over the next decade, he led his band through a period of rapid economic development, taking it from one of the poorest to one of the wealthiest in B.C.

During his period of band leadership, Derrickson broke new ground by leading his band into a logging venture on their Aboriginal title lands with an Indigenous rather than a provincial permit, an action that led to similar logging initiatives among B.C. Indigenous peoples.

The federal government launched an enquiry into Derrickson91Ƶs tenure as chief in the form of the Hall Commission in 1986. The enquiry cleared him of any wrongdoing.

Writing books has been a new venture that Derrickson has found satisfying, saying he loves the process of taking a literary premise and following it through to completion.

His previous books Unsettling Canada: A Nation Wake-Up Call won the Aboriginal prize of the Canadian History Association in 2016, and Reconciliation Manifesto won the B.C. Book Prize for non-fiction in 2018.

He is already well into developing his next book, which will talk about his life history as a negotiator.

91ƵI91Ƶm still working91ƵI don91Ƶt know anything else to do,91Ƶ he laughed.

91ƵI have had an interesting life. I tell my kids if I die tomorrow, don91Ƶt cry. I have had a great life91ƵI did it all.91Ƶ

READ MORE: Kelly Derrickson91Ƶs music with a message

READ MORE: Westbank First Nation Chief abruptly resigns

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Barry Gerding

About the Author: Barry Gerding

Senior regional reporter for Black Press Media in the Okanagan. I have been a journalist in the B.C. community newspaper field for 37 years...
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