Windsor Star

B.C. RCMP set to remove blockade of $6.6B Coastal Gaslink pipeline

Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs facing arrests upon enforcemen­t of injunction

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

CALGARY RCMP in British Columbia said Wednesday they are prepared to remove a group of Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs who are blockading work on the $6.6-billion Coastal Gaslink pipeline.

“As enforcemen­t of the injunction nears, we’ve assembled a team in the area,” Eric Stubbs, RCMP assistant commission­er, criminal operations officer, told a late-afternoon news conference. He did not say when police would move on the blockade.

Stubbs said RCMP would allow protesters to leave the area or, if they chose to be arrested, could choose to do so with minimal force. “There are peaceful options that will involve a minimal use of force,” he said.

However, Stubbs said RCMP would also be prepared to make arrests using commensura­te force based on the actions of the opposed Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs in the area. He said the RCMP would be filming the event with body cameras, hand-held cameras and from the air.

All sides involved in the standoff in northern B.C. expected RCMP action after talks between the province and the opposed Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs broke down this week after just two days of what had initially been scheduled as seven days of meetings.

“We hope that the paramount need for safety stays the top priority for all parties,” said B.C. Indigenous Relations and Reconcilia­tion Minister Scott Fraser said in a release issued late Tuesday night.

“We and the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs made a committed effort to find a peaceful resolution to the situation,” Fraser said, adding that the two sides did not reach an agreement but the province remains open to further discussion.

Similarly, Coastal Gaslink said in a statement it was disappoint­ed that discussion­s did not result in a solution “that would prevent the enforcemen­t of the interlocut­ory injunction order.”

The company and opposed First Nations leaders had come to an access agreement for the area, but that was scrapped last month as tensions escalated in the region.

Coastal Gaslink — a venture jointly owned by Calgary-based TC Energy Corp., Alberta Investment Management Corp. (AIMCO) and New York private equity giant KKR & Co. LP — won an expanded injunction order from the Supreme Court of British Columbia in December.

Since then tensions in the region have steadily risen. Opposed Wet’suwet’en chiefs issued an eviction notice in early January to the company, resulting delays to the pipeline’s constructi­on schedule in the area as Coastal Gaslink delayed the deployment of workers to a nearby camp.

At this point, the company has hired 1,000 people working to build the project between Dawson Creek and Kitimat, B.C., to deliver natural gas from northeaste­rn B.C. to the $40-billion LNG Canada export project, which is currently under constructi­on on the coast.

None of those workers are currently deployed near Houston, B.C., where the group of opposed Wet’suwet’en chiefs have blockaded a forestry road.

“As communicat­ed last week, Coastal Gaslink needs to quickly resume constructi­on activities in the area to meet our commitment­s to LNG Canada, the province of British Columbia, our Indigenous partners, local communitie­s and the many workers who depend on the opportunit­ies our project provides,” the company said.

Coastal Gaslink president David Pfeiffer said last week the company did not have a specific deadline for constructi­on resuming in the area. However, the company now says it’s looking to deploy workers in the coming days.

“In the coming days, Coastal Gaslink will resume constructi­on activities in the Morice River area in accordance with our permits and interlocut­ory injunction,” the company said in its release Tuesday.

For its part, the group of Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs blockading the project also expected “imminent” RCMP action after talks broke down.

“Wet’suwet’en Hereditary Chiefs concerns are that safety be a priority for all Wet’suwet’en,” the group said in a statement.

On social media the group of opposed hereditary chiefs have posted pictures of temporary fences erected around a community centre in Houston, B.C. and multiple trucks parked in the parking lot. The group has speculated that a large RCMP contingent has been staying in the community centre amid the standoff.

The RCMP has been conducting patrols through the area and in January posted photos of felled trees, partially felled trees and stacks of tires filled with kindling and cans of fuels like gasoline in the blockaded area. At the time, police said they were opening a criminal investigat­ion over the setting of traps likely to cause injury.

After those photos were posted, the RCMP set up a checkpoint along the contested Morice River Forest Service Road, limiting access to the area.

The standoff has also exposed divisions on resource developmen­t among First Nations in British Columbia, as Coastal Gaslink has signed agreements with the elected chiefs and councils of all 20 Indigenous groups along the pipeline route.

“We agree that human rights are not a numbers game, but the majority of Indigenous leaders have chosen to consent to the project,” First Nations LNG Alliance CEO Karen Ogen-toews said in a news release issued in the middle of the standoff.

Financial Post

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A checkpoint is set up at a bridge leading to the Unist’ot’en camp on the First Nation’s traditiona­l territory near Houston, B.C., on January 2019. Talks between the province and the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs opposed to the Coastal Gaslink pipeline broke down this week.
THE CANADIAN PRESS A checkpoint is set up at a bridge leading to the Unist’ot’en camp on the First Nation’s traditiona­l territory near Houston, B.C., on January 2019. Talks between the province and the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs opposed to the Coastal Gaslink pipeline broke down this week.

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