Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Four Mount Polley Mine Protesters Arrested At Company's Vancouver Office

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Aug, 2016 01:12 PM
  • Four Mount Polley Mine Protesters Arrested At Company's Vancouver Office
VANCOUVER — Police say four people have been arrested following a protest against the Mount Polley mine at its head office in Vancouver.
 
Vancouver Police Department spokesman Const. Brian Montague says officers were called in on Tuesday when protesters entered the Imperial Metals (TSX:III) office and allegedly began behaving aggressively towards staff.
 
Montague says four people were taken into custody for allegedly pushing and shoving people inside the office.
 
Another 15 to 20 people stayed outside of the building and continued what Montague calls a loud, but lawful demonstration.
 
The four arrested were all released without charge after protesters left the site.
 
The protesters say in a release that they were marking the second anniversary of a spill at the Mount Polley mine in the B.C.'s Interior, where a tailings pond collapsed, sending millions of cubic metres of waste into nearby waterways.

MORE National ARTICLES

Soda Pop Tax? Feds Examine Financial Side Of A Potential Obesity-fighting Tool

OTTAWA — The federal government has weighed the pros and cons of a financial deterrent aimed at shrinking bulging waistlines: a tax on soda pop.

Soda Pop Tax? Feds Examine Financial Side Of A Potential Obesity-fighting Tool

'Extremely Challenging' Nova Scotia Wildfire Spreads To 240 Hectares

'Extremely Challenging' Nova Scotia Wildfire Spreads To 240 Hectares
Department spokesman Jim Rudderham said crews had to be removed from the Seven Mile Lake area late Monday afternoon for their safety as water bombers kept dousing the blaze.

'Extremely Challenging' Nova Scotia Wildfire Spreads To 240 Hectares

Amnesty International Calls For Halt To Site C, Dam Threatens Indigenous Rights

Amnesty International Calls For Halt To Site C, Dam Threatens Indigenous Rights
VICTORIA — Amnesty International is calling for a stop work order on British Columbia's $8.8 billion Site C hydroelectric dam, saying the mega project on the Peace River threatens the human rights of indigenous peoples.

Amnesty International Calls For Halt To Site C, Dam Threatens Indigenous Rights

Federal Government Expected To Act On 2012 Report Examining Fraser River Sockeye

Federal Government Expected To Act On 2012 Report Examining Fraser River Sockeye
The 75 findings in the three-year, $26-million report languished with little if any attention from the former Conservative government.

Federal Government Expected To Act On 2012 Report Examining Fraser River Sockeye

Police Identify Victim Of Fatal Stabbing Outside Pub In Coquitlam, B.C.

Police Identify Victim Of Fatal Stabbing Outside Pub In Coquitlam, B.C.
Suspect In Fatal Coquitlam Stabbing On The Loose

Police Identify Victim Of Fatal Stabbing Outside Pub In Coquitlam, B.C.

Police Say Liesel The 12-Day-Old Filly Was Filched From A Langley, B.C., Farm

Although she's young, the horse's warmblood Oldenburg breed makes her valued at between $10,000 and $20,000.

Police Say Liesel The 12-Day-Old Filly Was Filched From A Langley, B.C., Farm