Calgary Herald

Wet’suwet’en leadership at loggerhead­s over deal

-

SMITHERS, B.C. Elected chiefs of a First Nation that’s split over a natural gas pipeline through their territory say they will not sign a deal on rights and title, a day after the hereditary chiefs backed the agreement.

The elected chiefs of the Wet’suwet’en Nations say they don’t support the proposed memorandum of understand­ing on rights and title reached with the federal and British Columbia government­s.

Gary Naziel, a Wet’suwet’en hereditary subchief, said most of the “grassroots chiefs” are opposed.

“Because the way business is being done is not our Wet’suwet’en way and it was done behind closed doors and nothing’s out in the open.”

It’s not about the pipeline but about the proper way of making decisions, he said in an interview on Friday.

“We’re trying to put a stop to it. Before we move forward, we need to fix things in a feast hall. The way decisions are being made — it’s so erratic now,” Naziel said.

“Our system is falling apart before of our own eyes.”

The hereditary chiefs’ decision to sign the memorandum was announced Thursday in a joint statement they issued with the federal and provincial government­s.

A spokesman for the hereditary chiefs could not be reached for comment.

Five elected Wet’suwet’en councils have signed agreements with Coastal Gaslink, the company that is building the 670-kilometre natural gas pipeline through northern B.C. to Kitimat on the coast.

The Wet’suwet’en are governed by both a traditiona­l hereditary chief system and elected band councils.

Coastal Gaslink has government approval for constructi­on of the pipeline, but hereditary house chiefs of the Wet’suwet’en say the company has no authority to build the pipeline through their territory without their consent.

Their opposition sparked demonstrat­ions and blockades that shut down large parts of the national economy in February.

Details of the memorandum haven’t been released but Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs and the federal and provincial government­s agree it commits them to implementi­ng the rights and title of the First Nation.

Elected chiefs say that the memorandum consultati­on process “lacked any semblance of credibilit­y,” and they are asking for withdrawal of the hereditary chief’s “premature” announceme­nt.

“The federal government, the provincial government and the hereditary chiefs have completely ignored many clan members and elected chiefs,” says the statement signed by five elected chiefs.

The negotiatio­n process did not include openness or respect, it says, and fails to give a voice to all clan members.

In announcing the proposed memorandum of understand­ing, senior government­s and hereditary chiefs agreed there’s a lot of work ahead in the negotiatio­n process, including how all sides will work together.

Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs have invited B.C.’S Indigenous relations minister, Scott Fraser, and Carolyn Bennett, the federal minister of Crown-indigenous relations, to sign the pact on May 14.

“We look forward to advancing this important work to implement Wet’suwet’en rights and title as three equal government­s,” said Thursday’s statement.

The memorandum has been framed as addressing broader land claims rather than an agreement over the pipeline.

It was reached after days of discussion­s in Smithers and work on the pipeline resumed after it was announced.

The dispute also involves other unsettled land rights and title issues, including who has the right to negotiate with government­s and corporatio­ns, the fact that the land is not covered by a treaty and remains unceded, and a 1997 court case that recognized the hereditary chiefs’ authority and the exclusive right of the Wet’suwet’en peoples to the land but did not specify the boundaries.

The Canadian Press

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES ?? Hereditary Wet’suwet’en chiefs set up camps to oppose the Coastal Gaslink pipeline. They approved a deal earlier this week, but now elected chiefs, who earlier supported the plan, are balking.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES Hereditary Wet’suwet’en chiefs set up camps to oppose the Coastal Gaslink pipeline. They approved a deal earlier this week, but now elected chiefs, who earlier supported the plan, are balking.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada