. . . "Lake St. Martin First Nation (Ojibwe: Obashkodeyaang) is a First Nations government and Treaty 2 signatory. The First Nation was based primarily at Lake St. Martin about 225 kilometres (140 mi) northwest of Winnipeg until May 2011. When a massive flood hit Manitoba, the Government of Manitoba decided to divert water to Lake St. Martin in order to protect cottage, and agricultural properties on other bodies of water. As a result all the housing at Lake St. Martin First Nation was destroyed. As of 2019, approximately 1,000 flood evacuees are still displaced."@en . "1934"^^ . "51.7480354309082"^^ . . . "1105961977"^^ . . "POINT(-98.435707092285 51.748035430908)"^^ . "51.748036 -98.43571" . . . . . . "Lake St. Martin First Nation"@en . . . . . . . . . . . "44386981"^^ . "-98.43570709228516"^^ . . . "Lake St. Martin First Nation (Ojibwe: Obashkodeyaang) is a First Nations government and Treaty 2 signatory. The First Nation was based primarily at Lake St. Martin about 225 kilometres (140 mi) northwest of Winnipeg until May 2011. When a massive flood hit Manitoba, the Government of Manitoba decided to divert water to Lake St. Martin in order to protect cottage, and agricultural properties on other bodies of water. As a result all the housing at Lake St. Martin First Nation was destroyed. As of 2019, approximately 1,000 flood evacuees are still displaced."@en . .