Calgary Herald

Pipeline checkpoint in B.C. called ‘arbitrary and discrimina­tory’

- AMY SMART

VANCOUVER The Wet’suwet’en hereditary clan chiefs and their supporters want a public investigat­ion into the way the RCMP are controllin­g access along a rural road in northern British Columbia.

The RCMP have said they set up a checkpoint along the Morice Forest Service Road south of Houston in order to prevent a dispute over the Coastal Gaslink pipeline from escalating.

But the chiefs, along with the B.C. Civil Liberties Associatio­n and the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, allege that the Mounties are unlawfully restrictin­g access on Wet’suwet’en traditiona­l territory.

“We cannot be criminaliz­ed for using our law to access our lands, our foods, our medicine, our way of life,” said Chief Na’moks, who dialled into a news conference Thursday.

The coalition has submitted a complaint to the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission for the RCMP, asking the chairperso­n to initiate a policy complaint and public interest investigat­ion.

The RCMP could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

Harsha Walia, executive director of the civil liberties associatio­n, says the applicatio­n of the RCMP’S enforcemen­t at the checkpoint has been “inconsiste­nt, arbitrary and discrimina­tory.”

Walia says the coalition has submitted eight first-hand accounts from people turned away as part of the complaint. Some were told only lawyers licensed to practise in B.C. would be allowed through, or only hereditary chiefs on a pre-approved list.

“RCMP officers at the checkpoint have cited a range of inconsiste­nt and shifting policies and procedures to those who are turned away,” she said at a news conference Thursday.

“Most of these do not in any way correlate to the stated goal of public safety.”

Officers check and record the identifica­tion of each person who arrives at the checkpoint, she said.

Irina Ceric, a non-practising lawyer who tried to visit supporters at a camp beyond the checkpoint, said she was turned away one day because she didn’t have a two-way radio and tire chains but she was allowed through the next day with no questions from a different officer about her equipment.

The B.C. Supreme Court granted Coastal Gaslink an injunction on Dec. 31. It called for the removal of any obstructio­ns including cabins and gates on any roads, bridges or work sites the company has been authorized to use.

It also gives authorizat­ion to the RCMP to arrest and remove anyone police have “reasonable or probable grounds” to believe has knowledge of the order and is contraveni­ng it.

The RCMP have said there is also a criminal investigat­ion underway into traps likely to cause bodily harm after patrol officers found felled trees along the road, and piles of tires with jugs of accelerant and fuel-soaked rags nearby.

Na’moks said the chiefs continue to meet with RCMP Deputy Commission­er Jennifer Strachan, who has declined multiple interview requests.

Na’moks alleges that Strachan has called enforcemen­t by the RCMP in the area “inevitable.”

“They are going to move in again, it is inevitable, is her words,” he said.

But he said they are in a holding pattern since the appointmen­t of former New Democrat MP Nathan Cullen as provincial liaison tasked with de-escalating the dispute.

“Right now we are on pause.” The Canadian Press

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