The latest on protests across Canada in support of anti-pipeline demonstrators
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 17/02/2020 (1774 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
Here is the latest news on protests across Canada over a natural gas pipeline project in British Columbia:
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he spoke with British Columbia Premier John Horgan to discuss the impact of infrastructure disruptions caused by blockades across Canada.
Trudeau says in a news release that he and Horgan “agreed on the importance of resolving the infrastructure disruptions caused by blockades quickly and peacefully, and of continuing to address underlying issues in the spirit of reconciliation.”
He said he and ministers “will continue to reach out to premiers and Indigenous leaders to bring this situation to a resolution as soon as possible.”
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Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe, who has been critical of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s response to the anti-pipeline blockades across the country, tweeted he’s convened a conference call Wednesday of premiers.
Moe, who is chairman of the Council of the Federation, said in the tweet that he’s taken the step due to “a lack of federal leadership in addressing this ongoing illegal activity.”
A spokesman for the premier said in an email that Moe made the decision following requests from a number of premiers.
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Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller says Carolyn Bennett, the minister in charge of Crown-Indigenous relations, has spoken with hereditary chiefs of the Wet’suwet’en Nation.
Bennett had invited the chiefs, whose opposition to a natural gas pipeline has sparked solidarity protests and blockades across the country, to meet in an effort to reach a peaceful resolution.
Miller says the ministers clearly see a path forward and there is “modest and positive progress” toward de-escalation.
But he said the situation is evolving hour-by-hour and it would be loathe to share what they spoke about.
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The RCMP say they are aware of a request to remove a mobile policing unit from an area in northern British Columbia where they enforced an injunction against pipeline opponents this month.
Staff Sergeant Janelle Shoihet says discussions are underway with respect to possible next steps.
She says any options will have to be discussed with all stakeholders.
Out of respect for those discussions, she says RCMP have nothing to share at this time.
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A Wet’suwet’en hereditary house chief says he won’t meet with federal or provincial cabinet ministers until the RCMP removes a mobile unit from their First Nation’s traditional territory.
Chief Woos of the Grizzly House says all hereditary chiefs are in agreement and he accuses the RCMP of being “bullies” and threatening pipeline opponents.
Under the Wet’suwet’en traditional governance system there are 13 house chiefs and five senior clan chiefs.
Carolyn Bennett and Scott Fraser, the federal and provincial ministers in charge of Indigenous relations, sent a joint letter to the hereditary chiefs asking for a meeting with the goal of reaching a peaceful resolution to the impasse.
The RCMP say an exclusion zone has been lifted in the remote area where they arrested 28 people while enforcing an injunction but their community industry safety office will remain in place and they’ll continue “patrols of the corridor to ensure everyone’s safety.”
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Canadian National Railway Co. is temporarily laying off about 450 workers at its operations in Eastern Canada.
CN says the layoffs will affect operational staff, including employees working at Autoport in Eastern Passage, Moncton, Charny and Montreal.
The Montreal-based freight transporter says the situation is “regrettable.”
CN says it’s had to cancel about 400 trains as a result of blockades erected in solidarity with the hereditary chiefs of the Wet’suwet’en First Nation, who oppose development of a natural gas pipeline that crosses their traditional territory.
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Via Rail says passenger service will resume throughout southwestern Ontario later this week.
The company says routes between Toronto and Windsor, Niagara and Sarnia will be up and running Thursday morning.
Thursday will also see Via resume service between Ottawa and Quebec City.
Trains remain suspended in most of the rest of Canada, including a key stretch of Via’s most profitable corridor running from Toronto to Ottawa and Montreal.
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One of the investors buying a stake in the Coastal GasLink pipeline says it remains committed to the deal despite protester blockades that have shut down railway lines in large parts of Canada.
Alberta Investment Management Corp., which looks after more than $115 billion in public sector pension funds for the province, agreed with American partner KKR in December to buy a 65 per cent interest in a deal that’s expected to close in the first half of this year.
AIMCo spokesman Denes Nemeth says the corporation has confidence that the pipeline developer can deal with the current situation and ensure the project is completed successfully.
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The federal minister in charge of Crown-Indigenous relations says she’s waiting on an invitation from the Wet’suwet’en hereditary clan chiefs to meet in their community.
Carolyn Bennett says a meeting had been proposed at the end of the month, but she would like to meet as soon as possible to discuss a peaceful resolution to the conflict over a natural gas pipeline that has spawned Canada-wide protests.
The Wet’suwet’en hereditary clan chiefs have been silent about whether they are open to a joint meeting with Bennett and B.C. Indigenous Relations Minister Scott Fraser since the minister publicly stated interest in such a gathering yesterday.
The meeting was originally proposed by a hereditary chief with the neighbouring Gitxsan First Nation, and Wet’suwet’en chief Na’moks said on Sunday they would only participate as witnesses.(The Canadian Press)
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Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer says anti-pipeline protests by “radical activists” are a warm-up act in the next battles against the Trans Mountain expansion project and the proposed Teck Frontier oilsands mine in northeastern Alberta.
Scheer told Parliament that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has encouraged these types of protests by cancelling other projects based on political considerations.
Scheer says every person has the right to free speech, but nobody has the right to hold the Canadian economy hostage.
Scheer says it’s time for the government to step in to do something about the protests that have been blocking rail traffic for more than a week.
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Police responded to the Victoria-area home of B.C. Premier John Horgan this morning when anti-pipeline protesters blocked his driveway.
Members of the group Extinction Rebellion Vancouver Island said Monday they would attempt a “citizen’s arrest” to show support for Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs and disrupt the provincial budget, due to be delivered later today.
Four RCMP vehicles were called to Horgan’s home in Langford where two people were lying across the driveway while others stood in the street.
The two in the driveway were taken into custody, and Horgan left for the legislature a few minutes later accompanied by his security detail.
Opposition Leader Andrew Wilkinson condemned the protesters’ actions, saying no one should ever feel unsafe in their home or workplace. (CTV, The Canadian Press)
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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his government is listening to those opposed to construction of a natural gas pipeline through traditional Wet’suwet’en territories in northwestern B.C.
Trudeau addressed Parliament as it resumed today, saying the protests and their consequences represent a “critical moment” for the country as protests flare over the multibillion-dollar project.
But he also says a solution will not be quick or simple.
He says he is extending his hand to the Wet’suwet’en and Mohawk nations as his government continues to work on a path forward, one that he says “cannot afford to fail.”
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Business groups are calling on the federal government to take steps to immediately restore disrupted rail service.
Dennis Darby, C-E-O of Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters, says the situation is “beyond serious.”
The group estimates that goods worth about 425-million-dollars are being stranded every day the blockade continues.
Darby says it will take three to four days of work to recover from a single day of disruption.
His message is underscored by Maple Leaf Foods president Curtis Frank, who says Canada exports 60 per cent of its pork products and needs an urgent government response to resolve rail blockades.
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An emergency debate will be held in the House of Commons tonight to consider the blockades set up in support of Wet’suwet’en leaders opposed to a pipeline project in their traditional territory.
The NDP and Bloc Quebecois successfully lobbied Speaker Anthony Rota for the debate.
It will allow MPs to discuss the stoppage of rail traffic in eastern Canada and on-again-off-again blockades at roads, bridges and ports elsewhere.
A revision to the Commons agenda was announced this morning.
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The national chief of the Assembly of First Nations is calling for calm and constructive dialogue to ease tensions over a British Columbia pipeline and the nationwide protests the project has spawned.
National Chief Perry Bellegarde says governments and industry need to give the time and space to work with the Wet’suwet’en.
Hereditary chiefs of the Wet’suwet’en First Nation oppose the pipeline through their traditional territory, though it’s received approval from elected band councils.
Bellegarde says it’s vital that honest political activism not be criminalized.
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Via Rail is preparing to resume part of its passenger rail service as anti-pipeline protests continue to shut down freight and passenger train routes in much of the rest of Canada.
The company says partial service will be resume Thursday to and from Ottawa and Quebec City, with a stop in Montreal.
Almost all other Via trains, except for the Sudbury-White River and Churchill-The Pas routes, remain cancelled.
Protesters have blocked rail lines in several parts of Canada to show solidarity with hereditary Wet’suwet’en chiefs opposed to construction of the Coastal GasLink natural gas pipeline through their traditional territories in northwestern B.C.
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This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 18, 2020