Canada Chooses Oil Companies Over Indigenous Peoples
It is clear that governments are choosing which law to uphold, prioritizing the law that protects oil and gas corporations, rather than the law that protects the rights of Indigenous peoples.
January 18, 2022 by QUOI Media Group
By Zoe Craig-Sparrow, Shelagh Day and Margot Young
The contradictions couldnt be more glaring.
While recent laws passed by the federal and the British Columbia governments pledge to transform relationships with Indigenous peoples, their actions indicate otherwise.
For example, in northern B.C., the Wetsuweten Hereditary Chiefs of all five clans oppose incursion into their traditional, unceded lands by the Coastal Gaslink pipeline. While some elected Band Councils in Wetsuweten territory support the project, both Indigenous law and the Supreme Court of Canada recognize the Hereditary Chiefs as stewards of the 22,000 kilometers of central B.C. that is Wetsuweten yintah (territory).
Conflict with the RCMP in B.C. has shone a bright light on this issue. The RCMP has invaded the camps of the Hereditary Chiefs three times in three years, the most recent, in November 2021. Twenty-nine people, including two accredited journalists, were arrested in a multi-day invasion last month. When the arrest footage was eventually released, it showed RCMP officers pointing assault rifles at unarmed Indigenous people.
At the heart of the matter is a contradiction about the rule of law.
The narrative offered by the federal and provincial governments is that since the B.C. Oil and Gas Commission granted a permit, and a court granted CoastalGas Links request for an injunction against blockades, the police are simply upholding the rule of law. They portray the Hereditary Chiefs as a small band of dissident troublemakers defying a court order.
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