Penticton Herald

Amnesty Internatio­nal takes aim at Site C dam

-

VANCOUVER (CP) — An annual Amnesty Internatio­nal humanright­s campaign is taking aim at a Canadian project for the first time — the Site C dam.

The $8.8-billion hydroelect­ric dam project in northeast British Columbia was one of 10 global issues targeted by the Write for Rights campaign on Saturday.

The campaign involves events held across the world where people write letters petitionin­g leaders for action on human-rights causes.

Letter-writers are demanding Prime Minister Justin Trudeau revoke approvals for the project, which would flood First Nations spiritual, burial and archeologi­cal sites and affect hunting and fishing areas in the Peace Valley.

Craig Benjamin of Amnesty Internatio­nal Canada said it’s significan­t that the project was selected for the campaign — along with high-profile causes in the U.S., China and Iran.

“The human-rights abuses are real and significan­t, of both the direct impacts of the dam and the very process itself, that the rights of indigenous peoples could be ignored in such a blatant way,” he said.

“It also has a symbolic importance that is larger than the Peace Valley, larger than British Columbia and larger than Canada.”

He said the Trudeau government wants to be seen on the world stage as a champion of indigenous rights and it must be reminded of its obligation­s by the internatio­nal community.

B.C. Premier Christy Clark announced approval of the project in December 2014, saying Site C will mark a historic milestone that will be felt for a century.

The dam would be the third on the Peace River, flooding an 83-kilometre stretch of valley near Fort St. John.

Constructi­on at the dam site started last summer and the federal government approved permits this year to allow work to begin on diverting water flows.

Amnesty Internatio­nal, an independen­t human-rights advocacy group, has issued reports calling for a halt to the project.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada