Calgary Herald

Pipeline buy seen as a ‘betrayal’

Indigenous, environmen­tal groups ask why spy agency interested in protests

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA Canada’s spy agency says many members of the environmen­tal and Indigenous communitie­s see the federal purchase of the Trans Mountain pipeline as a betrayal, and suggests that could intensify opposition to expanding the project.

A Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service assessment highlights a renewed sense of indignatio­n among protesters and clearly indicates the spy service’s ongoing interest in anti-petroleum activism.

The Canadian Press used the Access to Informatio­n Act to obtain a heavily censored copy of the June CSIS brief, originally classified top secret.

Civil liberties and environmen­tal activists questioned the rationale for CSIS’s interest, given that opposition to the pipeline project has been peaceful.

CSIS spokeswoma­n Tahera Mufti stressed the spy service is committed to following the governing legislatio­n that forbids it to probe lawful protest and dissent.

“While we cannot publicly disclose our investigat­ive interests, we can say that it is important for the service to pose important analytical questions on these types of issues, such as the question of whether developmen­ts such as the purchase of a pipeline could give rise to a national-security threat to Canada’s critical infrastruc­ture.”

Earlier this year, Kinder Morgan dropped plans to twin an existing pipeline that carries about 300,000 barrels of bitumen daily from Alberta to British Columbia. The federal government announced in late May it would buy the pipeline and related components for $4.5 billion.

The government intends to finance and manage constructi­on of the second pipeline — which would increase the overall flow of bitumen to 890,000 barrels a day — and ultimately try to find a buyer.

The CSIS brief characteri­zes resistance to the pipeline project as a “developing intelligen­ce issue.”

“Indigenous and non-Indigenous opponents of the project continue to highlight the increasing threats to the planet as a result of climate change and the incompatib­ility of new pipeline and oilsands projects with Canada’s 2015 commitment under the Paris Climate Accord,” the brief says. “At the same time, many within the broader Indigenous community view the federal government’s purchase and possible financing, constructi­on and operation of an expanded bitumen pipeline as wholly incompatib­le with its attempts at Crown-Indigenous reconcilia­tion.”

The pipeline acquisitio­n and commitment to complete the project is, therefore, “viewed as a betrayal” by many within both the environmen­tal and Indigenous communitie­s, CSIS says.

“Indigenous opposition at the grassroots level remains strong. In response to the federal purchase, numerous Indigenous and environmen­tal organizati­ons have restated their commitment to prevent constructi­on.”

The brief singles out the Treaty Alliance Against Tar Sands Expansion, noting it has signatorie­s from more than 50 North American First Nations in its bid to halt the project. It also features a May quote from Canadian environmen­tal organizati­on Stand.earth that the decision “will haunt the Trudeau government.”

The intelligen­ce brief was completed a little more than two months before the Federal Court of Appeal quashed government approval of the pipeline project due to inadequate consultati­on with Indigenous groups and failure to properly assess the effect of increased tanker traffic in the waters off British Columbia.

In the wake of the court ruling, the federal government ordered the National Energy Board to reassess the tanker issue and asked a former Supreme Court justice to oversee fresh consultati­ons with Indigenous communitie­s.

The CSIS brief notes there had been “no acts of serious violence” stemming from peaceful demonstrat­ions and blockades at Trans Mountain facilities in British Columbia that resulted in the arrest of more than 200 people, or at smaller protests across the country.

However, the document includes a section titled “Violent Confrontat­ions and Resource Developmen­t” that mentions past conflicts over shale-gas developmen­t in New Brunswick and a high-profile pipeline in North Dakota.

It is unclear, because of the redactions to the document, exactly what CSIS was looking at, said Josh Paterson, executive director of the British Columbia Civil Liberties Associatio­n, which has expressed strong concern about the spy service’s monitoring of activists.

In the informatio­n that has been released, there is no suggestion of a threat to national security or critical infrastruc­ture, of clandestin­e activities or of violence in relation to the Trans Mountain project, Paterson said.

“While some opponents of the pipeline were arrested during protest for breaching a court order, that was a matter for police and the courts, and was done out in the open — it should not be a matter for our spy agency.”

Given past interest on the part of security and police officials, the CSIS brief is not surprising, said Tegan Hansen, a spokeswoma­n for Protect the Inlet, an Indigenous-led effort against the pipeline and tanker project.

But she is curious as to why the spy service document makes reference to sabotage and violent physical confrontat­ions.

“I’m not sure why they’re trying to draw that connection with violence,” Hansen said. “I’d be interested to know. But it’s certainly not our intention to ever pursue violence.”

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service assessment highlights a renewed sense of indignatio­n among groups opposing the Trans Mountain pipeline project.
SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS A Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service assessment highlights a renewed sense of indignatio­n among groups opposing the Trans Mountain pipeline project.

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