Arab Times

Rail blockades have to end: Canada’s Trudeau

‘The onus is on them’

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TORONTO, Feb 23, (AP): Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday indigenous barricades that are blocking rail service across Canada and hurting the economy have to come down now.

Trudeau said that court injunction­s must be obeyed and that the situation is unacceptab­le and untenable and every attempt at dialogue has been made over the last two weeks.

Protesters later left a barricade site south of Montreal late Friday after riot police arrived. They earlier had begun dismantlin­g their encampment. A spokesman for the protesters vowed that other blockades would appear, and protesters remained at other rail protests sites.

Demonstrat­ors have set up blockades in British Columbia, Ontario, Alberta and Quebec in solidarity with opponents of the Coastal GasLink pipeline project that crosses the traditiona­l territory of the Wet’suwet’en First Nation in northweste­rn British Columbia. Some hereditary chiefs in the Wet’suwet’en First Nation oppose the natural gas pipeline, though it has received approval from elected band councils.

Trudeau said some people can’t get to work and others have lost their jobs. He said there is no point making the same overtures to indigenous leaders if they aren’t accepted.

“We can’t have dialogue when only one party is coming to the table,” Trudeau said. “The onus is on them.”

Via Rail, Canada’s passenger train service, said this week it is temporaril­y laying off 1,000 employees due to the continued halt in service on CN Rail’s tracks in eastern Canada caused by the blockades. CN Rail also announced 450 temporary layoffs.

The crisis is daily stranding goods worth an an estimated 425 million Canadian dollars ($340 million), according to the Canadian Manufactur­ers and Exporters trade group.

Trudeau said the army won’t be called in, saying troops aren’t used against Canadian citizens. He said removing the barricades must be done peacefully.

“Police have a job to do, but how they do that, when they do that, no politician gets to say,” he said.

The prime minister said officials have feared from the start that the situation could get worse and spent the last two weeks showing good faith in an effort to resolve the dispute. He said it would be lamentable if there was violence when the barricades are taken down, but added that Canadians cannot continue to suffer as a result of the rail shut down.

Trudeau has made reconcilia­tion with Canada’s First Nations a priority for his government but the blockades could risk public support.

“We are waiting for Indigenous leadership to show that it understand­s,” he said.

Trudeau met with his top Cabinet ministers Friday. Repeated offers to have ministers meet with Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs to address their issues have not been accepted, Trudeau’s office said.

One of the traditiona­l chiefs of the Wet’suwet’en Nation said his people are willing to engage in talks, but not until the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in British Columbia have left traditiona­l Wet’suwet’en territory entirely and Coastal GasLink, the pipeline company, ceases work in the area.

Until their demands are met, the barricade in Ontario erected by the Mohawks at Tyendinaga will not come down, said Kanenhariy­o, who also goes by Seth LaFort, of the Mohawks of Tyendinaga.

Hereditary Chief Woos, also known as Frank Alec, took issue with Trudeau’s comments that the blockades are causing trouble for Canadians, suggesting the Wet’suwet’en are facing injustice.

 ?? (AP) ?? Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau delivers a statement in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Feb 18, regarding infrastruc­ture disruption­s caused by blockades across the
country.
(AP) Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau delivers a statement in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Feb 18, regarding infrastruc­ture disruption­s caused by blockades across the country.

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