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News > Canada

Canada To Hold Talks with Indigenous Group About Pipeline

  • Supporters of the Wet'suwet'en who are against the LNG pipeline, block a Canadian National Railway line just west of Edmonton, Alberta, on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2020.

    Supporters of the Wet'suwet'en who are against the LNG pipeline, block a Canadian National Railway line just west of Edmonton, Alberta, on Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2020. | Photo: AP

Published 27 February 2020
Opinion

Activists have disrupted passenger and freight traffic to show solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en people in the Pacific province of British Columbia, who are seeking to stop TC Energy Corp from building a gas pipeline over their land.

A Canadian government minister was scheduled to open two days of talks with a major Indigenous group on Thursday in a bid to end three weeks of rail and road blockades across the country.

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Canada: 1,000 Rail Employees Laid-off Due to Railway Blockade

Carolyn Bennett, the minister of crown-Indigenous relations, and Scott Fraser, the British Columbia minister of Indigenous relations and reconciliation, are due to meet Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs on Thursday and Friday.

Ahead of the meeting the Wet’suwet’en chiefs issued a statement thanking supporters for “their tireless dedication,” saying they now needed time for talks with Bennett and Fraser in an atmosphere of respect.

“Pleased to have received this statement, and look forward to the important discussions this afternoon,” Bennett said in a Twitter post.

The chiefs agreed to the talks after the Royal Canadian Mounted Police withdrew from Wet’suwet’en territory, where police had been enforcing court orders against demonstrators trying to stop the Coastal GasLink pipeline.

TC Energy said on Thursday it had suspended construction for two days to allow the talks to take place.

Police in the eastern province of Ontario violently cleared protesters from a major Canadian National Railway Co line on Monday, allowing some shipments to resume.

Some activists, though, returned to the lines on Wednesday, standing on the tracks and lighting fires, actions that Garneau described as reckless and dangerous.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who says improving relations with Aboriginal groups is a priority, had initially called for dialogue. But last Friday, after opposition legislators accused him of weakness and business groups warned of economic damage, Trudeau demanded Aboriginal groups lift the blockades amid layoffs and shortages of goods like propane.

Garneau said on Wednesday that “some of these effects are going to be felt for weeks and months to come.”

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