Montreal Gazette

HEREDITARY CHIEFS OF THE WET’SUWET’EN SAT DOWN WITH GOVERNMENT MINISTERS ON THURSDAY AFTER TWO OF ITS LONG-STANDING CONDITIONS WERE MET. THE CHIEFS SAID THE MEETING IS A ‘FIRST STEP.’

Hereditary chiefs join B.C., federal leaders

- HINA ALAM

SMITHERS, B.C. •The hereditary chiefs of the Wet’suwet’en sat down Thursday with senior government ministers to discuss a pipeline dispute that has caused protests across the country, shutting down freight and passenger rail services.

Federal Crown-indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett and British Columbia Indigenous Relations Minister Scott Fraser arrived separately for the meeting with the hereditary chiefs, starting long-sought talks in the impasse.

Before the meeting began, both the RCMP and Coastal Gaslink said they agreed to conditions requested by the chiefs to allow the discussion­s to progress.

The natural gas company agreed to a two-day pause in its activities in northweste­rn B.C., while the RCMP committed to ending patrols along a critical roadway while the negotiatio­ns unfold. The chiefs praised the moves before the talks got underway.

“We believe these conditions provide the space we need to be able to sit down at the table in good faith and a positive path forward,” the statement read. “We are so close and have called on the provincial and federal government­s to support this de-escalation of activities so that this issue can be resolved.”

The chiefs said the meeting with Bennett and Fraser is a “first step,” noting both Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and B.C. Premier John Horgan declined invitation­s to discuss the long-simmering issues that have gained fresh urgency.

The chiefs’ opposition to a natural gas pipeline cutting across their traditiona­l territory, coupled with their efforts to limit police presence on their lands, have sparked shows of support across the country that have halted rail service for the past three weeks.

Both Bennett and Fraser said they hoped the meetings would pave the way to end the dispute and protests.

“We’re looking forward to the meeting,” Bennett said moments after arriving in Smithers. “Obviously this is very important. We reaffirm our interest in talking to the Wet’suwet’en Nation and their issues of title and rights.”

Fraser largely echoed Bennett in a statement before his departure for the meeting.

“We are pleased to have been able to arrange for further talks with Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs,” the statement read. “We are coming to the table with a commitment to respectful dialogue and are focused on finding a peaceful path forward.”

Horgan said he has met with the hereditary leaders twice over the past year and a half and is prepared to sit down with them again, but there need to be conditions for constructi­ve dialogue.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Protesters stand near the entrance of a blockade of the rail line in Kahnawake Mohawk Territory, near Montreal, on Thursday.
RYAN REMIORZ / THE CANADIAN PRESS Protesters stand near the entrance of a blockade of the rail line in Kahnawake Mohawk Territory, near Montreal, on Thursday.

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