FISHING DISPUTE
Nova Scotia Premier Scott McNeil calls on Ottawa to define a ‘moderate livelihood’
HALIFAX — Calls for Ottawa to define a “moderate livelihood” fishery mounted on Sunday, as hundreds gathered in support of Indigenous lobster fishers after a heated dispute over treaty rights boiled over.
Following fierce clashes outside fish plants in southwestern Nova Scotia last week, a lobster pound that stored the catch of Mi’kmaq fishers was burned to the ground early Saturday.
The attacks prompted widespread condemnation, with the NDP’s fisheries critic calling for an emergency debate in the House of Commons on Monday. The escalating violence also prompted a show of solidarity in Halifax on Sunday, where hundreds of people gathered at Grand Parade Square to show support for Mi’kmaq fishers.
In front of a large sign that read “Respect the treaties, protect the sacred,” multiple speakers addressed the crowd and spoke out about the violence directed at Indigenous fishers. Protesters held placards carrying slogans such as “We are all treaty people.”
Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil took to social media to urge Ottawa to define what constitutes legal harvesting in a “moderate livelihood” fishery.
McNeil tweeted that the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans needs to answer the question of what a moderate
livelihood looks like before the province can examine its own rules for fish buyers.
He said Nova Scotia’s regulations rely on the federal department’s “authority and responsibility to manage the fishery and identify what are legal, licensed fisheries.” McNeil added that the province is working with Ottawa to find a facilitator to “bring the sides together.”
“The way to resolve the issue is through respectful dialogue,” he said. “I‘m deeply concerned about the acts of intimidation and violence.”
The Mounties have made two arrests in relation to the incidents, with one man charged with assault against a local Indigenous chief and another man charged with arson for allegedly burning a vehicle.