Edmonton Journal

Talks between Wet'suwet'en, B.C., slow to progress

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British Columbia's SMITHERS, B.C. minister of Indigenous relations and reconcilia­tion says the progress on a memorandum of understand­ing signed last year marking the start of a new relationsh­ip between the hereditary chiefs of the Wet'suwet'en Nation and the federal and B.C. government­s has been slower than the parties would have liked.

In a news release, Murray Rankin says the pandemic and the complexiti­es of the negotiatio­ns are behind the slow progress.

He says he has met with hereditary and elected Wet'suwet'en leadership over the past two days, and that the parties are committed to implementi­ng the title and rights in the memorandum.

The memorandum of understand­ing was negotiated between government representa­tives and the hereditary chiefs who oppose Coastal Gaslink's pipeline going across the First Nation's traditiona­l territorie­s.

The project caused countrywid­e rail blockades and marches early last year.

The memorandum of understand­ing doesn't address Wet'suwet'en opposition to the pipeline, which is part of a $40-billion liquefied natural gas export terminal project in Kitimat on B.C.'S northern coast, but it states that the federal and B.C. government­s recognize the First Nation's rights and title are held under their system of governance.

It also placed timelines when it was signed in May 2020 over a 12-month period on negotiatio­ns affecting jurisdicti­on of land-use planning, resources, water, wildlife, fish, and child and family wellness, among other things.

Five elected Wet'suwet'en councils signed agreements with Coastal Gaslink, allowing the 670-kilometre natural gas pipeline to be built through their territory in northern B.C. to Kitimat.

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