Indigenous protest teepee to move to Parliament Hill after assault on activist
OTTAWA — Preparations were underway to move an Indigenous demonstration teepee onto Parliament Hill after a man was arrested for assaulting at least one of the activists Thursday.
The Bawaating Water Protectors from Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., arrived Wednesday night on the Hill with plans to erect a teepee and engage in four days of ceremonies they’re calling a “reoccupation” to draw attention to the history of Indigenous people in Canada during 150th birthday celebrations this weekend.
“We’re here to make people aware of the genocide that went on, the assimilations that went on,” said organizer Brendon Nahwegezhiche.
Originally the group clashed with police, who arrested nine people and told the group they couldn’t set up the teepee.
A few hours later, all nine were released without charges and the teepee was set up on a slope near the eastern entrance to the Hill.
It wasn’t where the group wanted it to be but was an initial compromise, with the hope of eventually moving it onto the Hill.
They’re getting their wish, after RCMP arrested a man who allegedly knocked a cellphone out of the hands of one of the activists. He was to be charged with mischief, one government source said.
Following the incident, negotiations began to move the teepee up onto the main lawn near the West Block.
The Bawaating Water Protesters are just one of many indigenous groups planning protest events and demonstrations this weekend to draw attention to the fact that for them, there is nothing to celebrate.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, speaking at an event in Charlottetown, said their position is understandable and must be respected.
“We recognize that over the past decades, generations, indeed centuries Canada has failed Indigenous peoples.”
He said there has to be a compromise to ensure the safety and security of huge crowds on Canada Day on the Hill as well as respect for the demonstrations.
“That’s what I expect of our security services and that’s what I am expecting to see,” he said.
Trudeau’s office wouldn’t say whether he intervened to stop the possibility of a large confrontation ahead of Saturday’s event.
Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett is hosting a picnic in her riding Saturday at which another reoccupation event is planned. On Thursday afternoon, she issued an invitation on Facebook and her MP website, making note of why many Indigenous people won’t be celebrating and inviting them to have their voices heard at her picnic.
“While many Canadians will be celebrating on Canada Day, for far too many it is a reminder of our colonialist, racist past,” she said in the invitation.