Vancouver Sun

Hereditary chiefs, B.C., Ottawa sign pact in virtual ceremony

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VICTORIA A virtual ceremony, where everyone involved pointed the freshly signed document at their cameras, marked the start of a new relationsh­ip between the hereditary chiefs of the Wet’suwet’en Nation, and the federal and B.C. government­s.

Government representa­tives and the hereditary chiefs who oppose Coastal GasLink’s pipeline going across their traditiona­l territorie­s signed a memorandum of understand­ing that was negotiated amid countrywid­e blockades, marches and encampment­s earlier this year.

“One by one we signed as it was being recorded and everyone could see it,” Scott Fraser, B.C.’s minister of Indigenous Relations and Reconcilia­tion, said Thursday.

“Essentiall­y, it was signed all today on the Zoom call,” said Fraser, who was in his ministeria­l office in Victoria during the event.

The traditiona­l in-person signing ceremony was shelved to respect guidelines from public health officials to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

The memorandum doesn’t address Wet’suwet’en opposition to the pipeline, which is part of a $40-billion liquefied natural-gas export terminal project in Kitimat. But it states that the federal and B.C. government­s recognize Wet’suwet’en rights and title are held under their system of governance. It also places timelines over a 12-month period on talks affecting jurisdicti­on over landuse planning, resources, water, wildlife, fish, and child and family wellness, among other things.

Hereditary Chief Dini’ze Woos said in a statement that the deal starts work toward building better understand­ing and stronger relationsh­ips between the Wet’suwet’en, Canada and B.C.

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