The Prince George Citizen

Pipeline protesters delay Trudeau speech

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OTTAWA — Dozens of pipeline protesters delayed an appearance by the prime minister in Ottawa on Tuesday afternoon, drumming and chanting in a government building where Justin Trudeau was set to speak.

Police kept the prime minister and Indigenous Services Minister Jane Philpott, Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett and Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna out of a Sussex Drive building in Ottawa where Trudeau was to address a forum bringing together federal officials and representa­tives from selfgovern­ing First Nations that have modern treaties with the Crown.

The protesters expressed anger about the RCMP’s interventi­on in a blockade in northern British Columbia, enforcing an injunction from the B.C. Supreme Court. The injunction is to remove anyone who interferes with a Coastal GasLink pipeline project in and around the Morice River Bridge.

Members of the Gidimt’en clan of the Wet’suwet’en First Nation have set up a camp and a checkpoint southwest of Houston on a forest-service road that leads to a pipeline constructi­on site.

Coastal GasLink says it has signed agreements with all First Nations along the route but demonstrat­ors say Wet’suwet’en house chiefs, who are hereditary rather than elected, have not given consent. The RCMP broke their blockade Monday night, sparking the protests.

Trudeau’s address was subsequent­ly moved to another government

building close to Parliament Hill later Tuesday.

“In this government, you have a partner willing to figure out the path forward that is right for each of you, and eventually right for every Indigenous person in this country,” Trudeau told the Indigenous leaders who’d moved to the new venue with him. “It’s not going to be easy. It’s not going to be done quickly.”

NDP reconcilia­tion critic Romeo Saganash joined demonstrat­ors on Parliament Hill on Tuesday before the group marched through downtown Ottawa streets with signs, including a large red one reading: “RCMP Off Wet’suwet’en Land.”

“The justificat­ion that was used for this interventi­on is pretty lame in my view,” Saganash told reporters. “We all know in 2019 that the Wet’suwet’en have title and rights to their territory.”

He also said he is “pretty disappoint­ed” by the silence of many politician­s, including his own colleagues, both provincial­ly and federally.

Saganash said he did not hear back from the provincial and federal Indigenous-affairs ministers he asked to help alleviate tension in northern B.C. prior to the arrests by the Mounties.

The federal government has a responsibi­lity to Indigenous Peoples in Canada, Saganash added.

“We are bound by the rule of law in this country,” he said. “What the rule of law means is not sending in the police. The rule of law means is respecting the Constituti­on and in that Constituti­on is Section 35, Aboriginal rights and treaty rights.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Security fights to keep protesters from storming a building where Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was scheduled to address a forum on Tuesday in Ottawa.
CP PHOTO Security fights to keep protesters from storming a building where Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was scheduled to address a forum on Tuesday in Ottawa.

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