National Post (National Edition)

DOES GREEN ACTIVIST PRESSURE ON NATIVES = ‘ECO-COLONIALIS­M?’

Indigenous leaders are raising the alarm over activists who are invading their lands, using hard-line tactics against those who don’t agree and ultimately leading some First Nations to lose out on billions of dollars.

- BY CLAUDIA CATTANEO

With his long flowing hair, stoic expression and tribal garb, Martin Louie, the hereditary chief of the Nadleh Whut'en First Nation in north-central British Columbia, didn't just look the part of an aggrieved leader in the epic fight against the Northern Gateway oilsands pipeline.

He was quoted in the campaign's news releases, filed complaints to the United Nations and spoke defiantly to investors. Environmen­tal group Stand.earth even described him as the “poster boy” for Indigenous opposition to Enbridge Inc.'s pipeline.

The $7-billion pipeline was eventually cancelled last year, but Louie didn't actually want to sink the project. Lost in the heat of the public battle was that he really just wanted to win more money for his impoverish­ed community than the “ridiculous” $70,000 a year being offered by the company.

Louie's experience is indicative of a widening rift between Indigenous communitie­s and activists over natural resources, particular­ly in British Columbia, the focal point of major green campaigns generously funded by U.S. interests to thwart oil and gas exports.

The campaigns consistent­ly portray a united Indigenous antidevelo­pment front and allies of the green movement, but some Indigenous leaders are becoming alarmed that they could be permanentl­y frozen out of the mainstream economy if resource projects don't go ahead.

In interviews, they said they've had enough of activists invading their lands, misleading them about their agendas, recruiting token members to front their causes, sewing mistrust and conflict, and using hard-line tactics against those who don't agree.

“The best way to describe it is eco-colonialis­m,” said Ken Brown, a former chief of the Klahoose First Nation in southweste­rn B.C. “You are seeing a very pervasive awakening among these First Nations leaders about what is going on in the environmen­tal community.”

For instance, Louie is now one of the leaders of the proposed $17-billion Eagle Spirit pipeline, a Northern Gateway alternativ­e championed by First Nations.

“When I went after Enbridge we were trying to gain more benefits for major projects going through our country,” he said.

Word soon got out about his difference­s with Enbridge and he was approached by a handful of lawyers representi­ng green organizati­ons who promised him assistance and funding, Louie recalled.

Their partnershi­p ended bitterly because the two sides had conflictin­g objectives. He wanted better benefits; the activists wanted the project to fail.

The eventual failure of Northern Gateway was just one of a series of tipping points in recent months that worry some Indigenous leaders.

There was also the demise of Pacific NorthWest LNG and Aurora LNG, as well as the continuing challenges faced by the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion and other proposed LNG projects. These cancellati­ons and obstacles are celebrated by activists, but also wiped out jobs and revenue for First Nations.

Eagle Spirit also faces difficulti­es. Led by Indigenous lawyer Calvin Helin and supported by First Nations along the proposed route through northern B.C., the project will collapse if the federal government goes ahead with a tanker ban that is making its way through Parliament.

The ban is related to the Great Bear Rainforest, which was created by the B.C. government last year to conserve a big part of the province’s northern and central coast.

Both initiative­s are seen by greens as big achievemen­ts, but are disputed by First Nations such as the Lax Kw’alaams, who said they were advanced without proper consultati­on and prevent their members from making a living.

Brown’s experience with environmen­tal activism started about a decade ago, when he was chief of his tribe and supported two run-of-river hydro projects.

The projects were attacked by groups such as Save Our Rivers and Western Canada Wilderness Committee for being harmful to fish habitat, and Brown’s band was criticized for being “sellouts and socially irresponsi­ble people looking for the quick buck,” he said.

“What an onslaught it was. There was a high level of participat­ion from people who had never been to the region … and they were all conveying the same narrative: ‘The sky is falling, keep your blood money, corporatio­ns are evil.’”

Brown, who now runs a consulting company, said similar tactics are used against other projects, too.

“If First Nations communitie­s are willing to conform to the prescribed eco-narratives, they are going to get all kinds of accolades and praise, but if they don’t conform, it’s vitriolic hit pieces on these people,” he said.

Louie is still shaken by the backlash he experience­d. After complainin­g to activists they were only using him to advance their cause, he said he was blackballe­d.

“Workers were spreading the word that I am not a good man, that I am there to ruin the environmen­t, that I am making money on my own,” he said. “They were making me sound like I am taking millions from a lot of people. If I was in that position, I wouldn’t be struggling to pay for my car payments.”

Louie said he joined the Eagle Spirit project to achieve what he couldn’t with Northern Gateway: help his tribe become economical­ly self-reliant.

Environmen­tal organizati­ons and Indigenous communitie­s in recent years have found common cause in opposing some projects and in fighting the impacts of capitalism on the environmen­t, said Dwight Newman, Canada research chair in Indigenous rights at the University of Saskatchew­an.

A big reason is that Indigenous people have unique legal rights and by working with them, green groups are better able to block developmen­ts than if they relied on environmen­tal grounds alone, he said.

Section 35 of Canada’s constituti­on states the Crown has a duty to consult with First Nations, Inuit and Métis communitie­s and, where it anticipate­s adverse impacts, to accommodat­e to the extent reasonably possible.

So far, the law has been used against developmen­t, but one of the unknowns is whether Indigenous communitie­s will use it to pursue economic developmen­t and override the environmen­tal laws that block projects such as Eagle Spirit, Newman said.

“At some point, these arguments will end up in the courts, either directly as rights claims or as claims that there ought to have been consultati­on on potential effects on such rights,” Newman said in an article for the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, where he is a senior fellow.

“And the very presence of these arguments will overturn the expectatio­ns of many who think they have liberal views, but actually have ongoing paternalis­tic views that assume First Nations always need protection from developmen­t.”

Many conservati­on campaigns rely on U.S. funds because there is more money available there due to tax laws and an abundance of wealthy philanthro­pists.

Vancouver-based researcher and blogger Vivian Krause has tallied the large sums poured in by U.S. groups to fight pipelines and gas projects in Canada by analyzing tax filings.

The biggest funder has been the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, which has granted more than $190 million to First Nations, environmen­tal and other organizati­ons working in B.C., Krause said.

The top recipient of funds from the Moore Foundation is Tides Canada, which received at least $70 million, she said. Tides Canada spends that money internally and re-grants it to other groups, particular­ly First Nations organizati­ons.

Other big U.S.-based funders are the Rockefelle­r Brothers Fund, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and Pew Charitable Trusts.

“These American interests are trying to stop these projects any way they can, and one of the best ways is by leveraging the constituti­onal rights of First Nations in the courts,” Krause said.

The former United Nations worker said she pursued the research because of pleas for help from Indigenous leaders “who want jobs and social and economic prosperity (and) are sick and tired of what they call the paid protesters.”

One of those leaders is Gary Alexcee, a hereditary chief of the Nisga’a Nation near Alaska, and a member of Eagle Spirit’s Chiefs Council. He’s disappoint­ed the federal government is giving more weight to environmen­talists than to the needs of Indigenous communitie­s.

“We were totally taken aback and surprised by the announceme­nt of this tanker ban because of the government’s statement that they were going to include First Nations,” he said. “No one got consulted.”

Eagle Spirit would create jobs and opportunit­ies “that people never had” in a region where other industries such as fishing, forestry and eco-tourism are doing badly, he said.

Alexcee, 70, said many in his community don’t support green campaigns. He said activists have come to the region in big numbers and picked “token” members to advance their causes.

Relations between activists and Indigenous people got really ugly in nearby Prince Rupert, in the territory of the Lax Kw’alaams.

The community was initially opposed to a liquefied natural gas project proposed by a consortium led by Malaysia’s Petronas because of its location on Lelu Island, which they believed would threaten juvenile salmon.

They became supporters after negotiatin­g bigger benefits and getting the project to re-locate.

But a small group of opponents continued to protest. Their frontman was Donnie Wesley, who claimed to be a hereditary chief and led an occupation of the site. That opened the door for activists to come in and offer band members funds and assistance to defeat a high-profile target, said Mayor John Helin.

Dozens of “profession­al protesters” travelled to the area from as far away as California with funding from groups such as SkeenaWild Conservati­on Trust, which, in turn, was getting money from Tides and the Moore Foundation.

“More or less, they called me a traitor,” Helin said.

Petronas pulled the plug on the $36-billion venture this summer, which meant $2 billion in benefits over 40 years for the band were lost.

The Lax Kw’alaams chided Wesley for misreprese­nting himself as a hereditary leader. The dispute over who represente­d the community ended up in court. Wesley lost and is appealing.

Greg Knox, executive director of Terrace, B.C.-based

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Martin Louie in his days of leading protests against the Northern Gateway pipeline. Louie says he did not want to sink the project but was instead seeking a better deal for his community from Enbridge Inc. Today, Louie is backing the Eagle Spirit...
CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS Martin Louie in his days of leading protests against the Northern Gateway pipeline. Louie says he did not want to sink the project but was instead seeking a better deal for his community from Enbridge Inc. Today, Louie is backing the Eagle Spirit...
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 ??  ?? MARTIN LOUIE IN 2012 CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS
MARTIN LOUIE IN 2012 CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS
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