The Province

Pipeline project ‘hijacked’ by ‘five guys,’ former leader says

- RYAN TUMILTY

OTTAWA — Theresa Tait Day, a former Wet'suwet'en hereditary leader, told MPs a pipeline project had been “hijacked” by five male chiefs and criticized Liberal cabinet ministers for making a secret deal with them.

Speaking at a House of Commons committee meeting, Tait Day said the decision last month to meet with hereditary chiefs was a mistake.

“The government has legitimize­d the meeting with the five hereditary chiefs and left out their entire community,” she said. “We cannot be dictated to by a group of five guys.”

Crown Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett met with a group of hereditary chiefs from the Wet'suwet'en community in Northern B.C. last month after weeks of crippling railway blockades.

After several days of meetings, the two sides came to an agreement, the details of which are secret while the hereditary chiefs take the deal back to their community.

The hereditary chiefs oppose the Coastal GasLink pipeline, a project that would bring liquefied natural gas to the B.C. coast for export.

But Tait Day, part of a group called the Wet'suwet'en Matrilinea­l Coalition, who was stripped of her title of hereditary chief after supporting the Coastal GasLink project, said the vast majority of the people in Wet'suwet'en

territory want the project to go ahead.

“This project has been hijacked by the five chiefs,” she said. “Over 80 per cent of the people in our community said they wanted LNG to proceed.”

The matrilinea­l coalition was put together in 2015 to help the Wet'suwet'en people come to a decision on the pipeline project. It received funding from Coastal Gas, but Tait Day said that had not influenced their decision to support the project.

In addition to support from Tait Day and other members of the coalition, the project had the backing of elected band council chiefs. Critics said those band council chiefs were part of the Indian Act system. Tait Day said band councils were a flawed system, but their opinions shouldn't be ignored.

“The Indian Act system must be reformed, but that does not invalidate the role of the elected councils,” she said, adding her community needed economic prosperity to build a more sustainabl­e community.

“We need to have the benefits of our land. We need to be able to have equity stakes in projects that come forward.”

The hereditary chiefs were being supported by environmen­talists, Tait Day said, who were disrespect­ing the rest of the Wet'suwet'en community.

“We feel like we have been hijacked by the protesters, who have their own agenda.”

Bennett said she and her B.C. counterpar­t were prepared to return to the community to sign the agreement when the Wet'suwet'en community ratified it. She said the agreement was only meant to be the start of the process.

“What we agree on is that now the conversati­on begins. How does the nation make decisions together?” she said. “That is why the hereditary chiefs chose to take it back to their house and their clans to see if there is support for that.”

The chiefs who met the ministers have indicated they would take the draft agreement to the community to get consensus on whether to move forward. But Tait Day said they had not held large public meetings, only smaller clan meetings of 20 or fewer people.

 ?? — parlvu.parl.gc.ca ?? THERESA TAIT DAY
— parlvu.parl.gc.ca THERESA TAIT DAY

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