FACTBOX-Canada's residential schools, native population
Here are some key facts about the residential schools and Canada's aboriginal population:
* Around 150,000 students attended the schools, which operated from the 1870s to the 1970s. The last school closed in 1996. There are currently around 87,000 survivors.
* In 1920, attendance became compulsory for all children aged 6 to 15. In 1931, at the peak of the residential school system, there were about 80 schools. In all, there were a total of about 130 schools run by the Anglican, Catholic, United and Presbyterian churches.
* The schools were meant to educate native children but became tools to assimilate the aboriginal population. Duncan Campbell Scott, a government bureaucrat, declared in 1920 that "I want to get rid of the Indian problem." He added: "Our objective is to continue until there is not a single Indian in Canada that has not been absorbed into the body politic."
* Ottawa agreed to a C$1.9 billion ($1.9 billion) settlement with school survivors in May 2006 that ended years of lawsuits. Survivors are eligible for C$10,000 for the first year they attended a residential school and C$3,000 for every year they were at a school after that.
* The settlement also agreed to established a truth and reconciliation commission, which started work on June 1, 2008. It will spend the next five years traveling across Canada gathering testimony from survivors.
* There are currently around 1 million aboriginals in Canada out of a total population of 32 million. Many natives live in remote reserves where poverty, crime and suicide rates are much higher than the national average
* Ottawa currently spends around C$10 billion a year on the aboriginal population.
($1=$1.02 Canadian) (Reporting by David Ljunggren; editing by Rob Wilson)
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