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Land defenders arrested on Wet'suwet'en territory as RCMP enforces Coastal GasLink injunction

RCMP officers are enforcing a Coastal GasLink injunction, arresting Wet’suwet’en land defenders and supporters Thursday, days after they took control of a forest service road and ordered pipeline workers to leave Gidimt’en territory
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Police check out the blocked road leading to the Gidimt'en checkpoint near Houston B.C., on Thursday January 9, 2020. Mounties in northern B.C. say they are enforcing an injunction preventing protests from blockading an access road for about 500 people working on the Coastal GasLink natural gas pipeline. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson

RCMP officers are enforcing a Coastal GasLink injunction, arresting Wet’suwet’en land defenders and supporters  Thursday, days after they took control of a forest service road and  ordered pipeline workers to leave Gidimt’en territory in northwest B.C.

In a video update  published to Twitter, Sleydo’ Molly Wickham, Gidimt’en Camp  spokesperson, said RCMP moved into the territory and started arresting  land defenders at the Gidimt’en Checkpoint.

“Our warriors are down there, our  matriarch is there,” she said, noting the RCMP is using canine units to  assist with arrests. “There’s a lot of people that are there that are at  risk of this police violence.” 

According to a Gidimt’en update posted at 12:48 p.m. on Nov. 18, approximately 15 arrests have been made, including Elders, legal observers and media.

“We were hoping that a solution would be  reached without the need for police enforcement, however, it has become  very clear to us that our discretionary period has come to an end and  the RCMP must now enforce the orders given by the B.C. Supreme Court on December 31, 2019,” John Brewer, Chief Superintendent of the RCMP’s Community-Industry Response Group, said in a statement.

Hereditary Dinï ze’ (Chief) Woos, Frank Alec, expressed regret that workers are stuck in the camps behind the blockades.

“I want to mention to our local non-Wet’suwet’en members that we’re sorry you ended up in the middle of this,” he said in a video statement. “But I must say that we gave ample notice to [Coastal GasLink] that we were going to act on this.”

Workers were given eight hours on Sunday  to evacuate and Chief Woos granted a two hour extension, but of the  estimated 500 individuals housed at Coastal GasLink’s two remote work  camps, only a handful left. 

The 670-kilometre Coastal GasLink  pipeline, owned by TC Energy, would connect natural gas producers in the  province’s northeast with the LNG Canada facility currently under construction in Kitimat.

Coastal GasLink did not answer The Narwhal’s questions about whether the company had informed its workers  of the evacuation order, instead noting in an email, “We will not  jeopardize the safety of our workers, under any circumstance.”

According to a Tyee report, many workers were not told about the evacuation order. 

“I don’t know about everybody, but a lot  said they would have left,” one worker, who asked not to be named for  fear of losing their job, told The Tyee.

On Nov. 16, RCMP units set up an exclusion  zone 10 kilometres from where Wet’suwet’en land defenders and  supporters closed the road. The following day, Jennifer Wickham, a  Wet’suwet’en community member and media liaison for Gidimt’en Camp, was  transporting heart medicine to an Elder who is behind the blockades.  RCMP officers denied Wickham access to the territory. 

“When the roads were closed by enforcing our eviction notice to [Coastal GasLink] that we delivered back on Jan.  4, 2020, we were contacted by some of the B.C. representatives and all  they did was lecture us and reiterated the safety issue of the people at  the camp regarding their food supplies,” Woos explained in the  statement. “Now in talking about safety issues, the RCMP is currently  blocking kilometre 29 and not allowing any food supplies or medical  supplies back up to our camps, our territory, our unceded land, to our  people.” 

“It’s our land, we know how to hunt, we  know how to set snares, we eat rabbits and all that good stuff out on  our yintah (territory),” Woos added. “But that’s beside the point.  They’re saying safety and yet, they don’t allow anybody up there to  check on our people.”

“Medical and food supplies can be dropped off at the … 27.5 kilometre mark on the Morice [road] and those dropping  things off will need to make arrangements for the supplies to be picked  up,” Madonna Saunderson, northern B.C. spokesperson for the RCMP, told  The Narwhal in an email. “The local residents, media and the motoring  public may be inconvenienced during the injunction enforcement period as  pedestrians and vehicles will have limited and controlled access.”

Daniel Mesec, a freelance journalist  travelling with Jennifer Wickham to document the conflict, was also  prevented from passing the exclusion zone. 

Earlier this year, a coalition of media organizations, including The Narwhal, launched and won a B.C. Supreme Court case against the RCMP after police similarly restricted journalists’ access to the Fairy Creek blockades.

Human rights organizations, including the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, have called on provincial and federal governments  to immediately halt the Coastal GasLink pipeline project until the  free, prior and informed consent of the Indigenous people directly  impacted is given.

“Canada’s courts have acknowledged … that  the Wet’suwet’en people, represented by our hereditary chiefs, have  never ceded nor surrendered title to the 22,000 square kilometres of  Wet’suwet’en territory,” the hereditary chiefs wrote when they first  issued the eviction order in 2020, referring to a landmark Supreme Court  of Canada case which confirmed Wet’suwet’en and Gitxsan Rights and  Title. “The granting of the interlocutory injunction by B.C.’s Supreme  Court has proven to us that Canadian courts will ignore their own  rulings and deny our jurisdiction when convenient, and will not protect  our territories or our rights as Indigenous peoples.”

When the eviction order was first issued, RCMP officers arrested dozens of land defenders, including matriarchs, which led to solidarity actions across the country, including rail and port blockades.

Skyler Williams, a Mohawk Nation land  defender who was involved in 2020 rail blockades on Haudenosaunee  territory, said Indigenous people across the country are united in  support for the Wet’suwet’en.

“It’s absolutely imperative that people  start to understand if you’re not going to be respecting Indigenous  Rights to our lands, whether it’s here, the streets of downtown Toronto  or in the bush at Land Back Lane, our people are gonna stand together,”  he told The Narwhal in an interview.

“Our perspective: we’re protecting the  Morice River. We call it Wedzin Kwa, it’s a sacred headwater,” Woos  said, his newborn child crying in the background. “Fresh mountain water  flows, all these little creeks coming from the mountain flow into the  Morice River. The Morice River goes into the Bulkley, and the Bulkley  goes into the [Skeena] and it goes into the ocean. This is why we are so  devastated and beside ourselves as to why this pipeline is going  through such an incredible ecosystem.”

“Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs and our  clans have full jurisdiction here,” Wickham said. “They have no right to  be on our territory. They are trespassing, they are violating human  rights. They’re violating Indigenous Rights and most importantly,  they’re violating Wet’suwet’en law.”

‘We need an apology’

Woos explained that the details of why the  Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs are taking this action have been  obscured from the public.

“Since they started the project, and I’m  referring to this pipeline, they never proceeded to contact the  Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs,” he said. “They started instead to  divide the Wet’suwet’en people through the benefit agreements and  excluded the hereditary chiefs.”

The benefit agreements were provided to  elected band councils in return for their approval of the project, which  the province recently noted in a statement by B.C. Minister of Public Safety and solicitor general Mike Farnworth.

“Coastal GasLink has project agreements  with all 20 elected chiefs and councils of the First Nations along the  pipeline route,” Farnworth wrote. “The Province has also secured  agreements with the vast majority of First Nations along the route.”

In a statement published to Coastal GasLink’s website on Nov. 18, the company said it has tried to engage in dialogue with the land defenders.

“Our top priority remains the safety of  those in the area, including our workforce, contractors, and the  Indigenous and non-Indigenous community members. Coastal  GasLink’s preference is to always seek constructive dialogue and share  information. Unfortunately, as protest group public statements made  clear, the protest group at the Morice River had no interest in  dialogue.”

Woos refuted the claim, noting the  hereditary chiefs met with the president and vice-president of the  company in the summer of 2020.

“They were attempting to start a dialogue  with us,” he said in the video statement. “But there was something that  was not right with the situation so we turned to the president and we  said to him, before we start that dialogue, we need an apology in  writing from you. And this apology should state the wrongs that they’ve  done toward the Wet’suwet’en people, in particular the hereditary  chiefs, by not consulting with them and not including them in the  planning and the development of this pipeline from day one, and  slandering the hereditary chiefs and misinforming the local people of  Smithers, Telkwa, Houston, Hazleton, Terrace, Burns Lake, Prince George  and making us look like we’re the bad people in this whole situation.”

“The hereditary chiefs agreed at that time  that if this letter was given and was completed, it would start the  process of dialogue,” Woos continued. “One year later, no letter, one  year later, no reply from [Coastal GasLink]. This is what the local  people need to know.”

“We’re asking again, in a diplomatic way,  for [Prime Minister Justin] Trudeau to sit down with us, the hereditary  chiefs, so that we can start a dialogue. So we can start discussions.”

Wickham said, in light of the arrests,  there is an urgent need that supporters demand the government listen to  the hereditary chiefs.

“We need everybody who’s an ally of  Wet’suwet’en, of Haudenosaunee, a supporter of Indigenous Rights, a  warrior of climate justice, to take action now,” she said in the video  statement. “We need you to shut shit down everywhere that you can, to  show this industry, this government and the world that they cannot do  this to Indigenous people anymore.”

— With files from Amber Bracken