Calgary Herald

OPPOSITION TO OILSANDS

Aboriginal groups step up efforts

- ROSS MAROWITS

Canadian First Nations and U.S. tribal communitie­s are stepping up their fight against Alberta’s oilsands industry, vowing to stop the developmen­t and distributi­on of the province’s crude across the continent.

Indigenous leaders from nearly 100 aboriginal communitie­s in Eastern and Western Canada and a few in the United States, including Standing Rock Indian Reservatio­n in North and South Dakota, signed a treaty Thursday in Montreal and Vancouver.

They plan to join together to prohibit and challenge the use of their lands for the expanded production of Alberta’s oilsands, including distributi­on of crude via pipelines, trains or tankers.

“We are going to stick together and we’re going to protect each other right across the country,” Grand Chief Serge Simon of the Kanesatake Mohawks in Quebec said Thursday.

The groups say they are targeting various proposed pipeline projects, including TransCanad­a’s Energy East, Enbridge’s Northern Gateway and Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain expansion.

“TransCanad­a won’t have an easy life in the coming year,” Simon told a news conference, adding that his fight in Quebec against Energy East will now be taken up by others while he will join efforts to block the Trans Mountain expansion in Alberta and B.C.

While the goal is to remain peaceful, he said all options are on the table.

“They should know that we never hesitated to taking our fight to the streets,” added Ghislain Picard, chief of the Assembly of First Nations of Quebec and Labrador.

“We have a few hundred years of experience in making sure that our voice is heard.”

The chiefs plan to meet soon to confirm their strategy and internatio­nal legal action is also a possibilit­y. The indigenous leaders say they may also work with non-aboriginal groups.

The goal is to push government­s to transition to alternativ­e energy, they say.

“We’re not proposing to destroy Alberta,” said Simon. “We’re trying to help it, we’re trying to help the country and we’re trying to help this planet.”

Government and oil industry representa­tives said they hope a broader dialogue arises from the alliance between U.S. and Canadian aboriginal leaders.

“If they are looking for that conversati­on and willing to engage with the energy sector, maybe that’s a way of opening some doors and talking about these issues and getting informatio­n flowing both directions that can enable Canada to succeed with its energy sector more fulsomely than if we don’t,” said Tim McMillan, president of the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers.

The Alberta government didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment but Ottawa said it is committed to a renewed nationto-nation relationsh­ip with indigenous peoples, based on recognitio­n of rights, respect, co-operation and partnershi­p.

 ??  ??
 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Traditiona­l drummers were part of the signing ceremony to oppose the oilsands by aboriginal leaders in Montreal Thursday.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Traditiona­l drummers were part of the signing ceremony to oppose the oilsands by aboriginal leaders in Montreal Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada