Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Horgan Says Pipeline Protests At B.c. Legislature 'Counterproductive'

The Canadian Press, 05 Mar, 2020 07:52 PM

    VICTORIA - B.C. Premier John Horgan questions what is being achieved by ongoing protests at the legislature, but he won't ask dozens of people camped at the building's ceremonial gates to leave.

     

    Horgan made the comments following a rally Wednesday by University of Victoria students who walked out of classes to attend the gathering in support of Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs.

     

    About 250 students were at the legislature to support the campers who say they will stay until pipeline company Coastal GasLink leaves traditional Wet'suwet'en territories in northwest B.C.

     

    Horgan said his NDP government is addressing environmental and Indigenous rights and title issues.

     

    "Dissent is an essential part of our democratic processes," he told a news conference. "However, I think at some point it becomes counterproductive. The pipeline is permitted. It is being built. It's being built by Indigenous Peoples to a great degree and the benefits are well known and well established."

     

    Coastal GasLink is building a 670-kilometre natural gas pipeline from Dawson Creek to Kitimat, where a liquefied natural gas export terminal is slated to be built.

     

    Horgan said the Wet'suwet'en people are considering rights and title issues and the pipeline following negotiations last weekend in Smithers between B.C. and federal government officials and the hereditary chiefs.

     

    "We are working on the range of issues that are important to the people camping here," he said. "Perhaps, if they spent some time to look at the work that's being done they might decide to go and do other things."

     

    Horgan said the government has the most progressive environmental agenda in North America and it recently adopted the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

     

    Wet'suwet'en supporter Kolin Sutherland-Wilson told the rally that protests at the legislature and across Canada are forcing governments to act on long-standing Indigenous issues.

     

    "This is the time to take a stand," he said. "Now is the time to act. "That is the reason we cannot compromise. This is the reason why we are here on this cold concrete."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Supreme Court To Hear B.C. Case Attempting To Halt Trans Mountain Expansion

    Supreme Court To Hear B.C. Case Attempting To Halt Trans Mountain Expansion
    OTTAWA - The B.C. government will ask Canada's high court Thursday to give it authority over what can flow through the expanded Trans Mountain pipeline from Alberta.

    Supreme Court To Hear B.C. Case Attempting To Halt Trans Mountain Expansion

    Canadian Firefighters Expect To Use Tailored Tactics To Battle Australia Blazes

    Canadian Firefighters Expect To Use Tailored Tactics To Battle Australia Blazes
    HALIFAX - As Canadian firefighters boarded flights Wednesday to battle blazes in Australia, they noted they will likely have to employ some different tactics than they do to fight local fires.    

    Canadian Firefighters Expect To Use Tailored Tactics To Battle Australia Blazes

    Alberta Government Promising To Fix Rules On Aging Energy Wells

    Alberta Government Promising To Fix Rules On Aging Energy Wells
    A group tasked with cleaning up thousands of abandoned energy sites in Alberta says the province's rules for ensuring polluters reclaim their wells before selling them off are inadequate.

    Alberta Government Promising To Fix Rules On Aging Energy Wells

    Pipeline At Centre Of B.C. Conflict Is Creating Jobs For First Nations: Chief

    Pipeline At Centre Of B.C. Conflict Is Creating Jobs For First Nations: Chief
    A pipeline at the centre of a conflict between hereditary chiefs and a natural gas company in northern British Columbia is creating jobs for Indigenous people and lifting communities from poverty, says an elected chief of a band that supports the project.    

    Pipeline At Centre Of B.C. Conflict Is Creating Jobs For First Nations: Chief

    Anonymous Internet Posters Successfully Sued For Defamatory Comments

    Anonymous Internet Posters Successfully Sued For Defamatory Comments
    The judgment in Ontario Superior Court of Justice comes despite the difficulties in suing people who post inflammatory comments anonymously, and who then fail to respond to the resulting legal proceedings against them.

    Anonymous Internet Posters Successfully Sued For Defamatory Comments

    Argument Over Iran Nuclear Deal Complicates Tehran Crash Probe

    LONDON - Iran's president levelled threats Wednesday against Europe in response to European countries' new crackdown on his country's violations of their nuclear deal — a move Canada is also supporting.    

    Argument Over Iran Nuclear Deal Complicates Tehran Crash Probe