Toronto Star

RCMP to review arrests at B.C. pipeline blockade

Temporary detachment to be erected to maintain safety in area, police say

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The RCMP will review the actions of officers who arrested 14 people at an Indigenous pipeline blockade in northweste­rn British Columbia, and will also erect a temporary detachment to maintain safety in the area. The Mounties enforced a court injunction Jan. 7 allowing Coastal GasLink workers and contractor­s access to a work site where a natural gas pipeline is planned near Houston.

Assistant commission­er Eric Stubbs held a news conference Monday to provide more details about the police operation, after criticism from Indigenous leaders about the use of force.

“I appreciate that for those directly involved with the police at the barricade, it was an emotional situation,” he said. “I also understand that there are some concerns surroundin­g our actions on Jan. 7.”

The RCMP will conduct a review of the incident that will produce recommenda­tions to address any issues and identify the parts of the operation that went well, as it does with any major operation, he said.

There is ample evidence available to assist with the review, including the use of body-worn cameras, drone and helicopter video and publicly available video, he added. “To date, we have not yet identified any issues regarding police officer conduct. However, it is important that we engage with the hereditary chiefs and any other involved persons.”

He said police have been engaging with Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs since the approval of the pipeline, which would carry natural gas to an export terminal in Kitimat as part of a $40-billion LNG Canada project.

“We had hoped … the terms of the injunction order would be met through dialogue and the need for enforcemen­t would not be required,” he said.

After the court order was issued, protesters erected a second blockade on a forestry road. Given the remoteness of the location and the unpredicta­ble situation, Mounties developed an operationa­l plan that included moving additional forces into the area, Stubbs said.

Local Indigenous leaders gave officers cultural awareness training as a part of the plan, he added.

RCMP made “every effort” to peacefully resolve the situation, but could not reach a deal and so enforcemen­t actions commenced late in the day on Jan. 7, he said.

 ?? JESSE WINTER STARMETRO VANCOUVER FILE PHOTO ?? Members of the RCMP liaison unit speak with Gidimt'en hereditary cheif Madeek at a reinforced checkpoint his people have erected in Wet'suwet'en territory to protest an LNG pipeline.
JESSE WINTER STARMETRO VANCOUVER FILE PHOTO Members of the RCMP liaison unit speak with Gidimt'en hereditary cheif Madeek at a reinforced checkpoint his people have erected in Wet'suwet'en territory to protest an LNG pipeline.

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