Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Wet'suwet'en Hereditary Chiefs To Meet Today With Federal And B.C. Governments

Darpan News Desk, 27 Feb, 2020 08:14 PM

    HOUSTON, B.C. - A meeting between Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs and the federal and British Columbia government is expected to take place today.

     

    Nationwide rail and road blockades have been popping up for weeks as a show of support for the hereditary chiefs of the First Nation in northwestern B.C., who oppose a natural gas pipeline project cutting across their traditional territory.

     

    Chief Na'Moks, who is also known as John Ridsdale, says the meeting scheduled to start this afternoon and continue Friday.

     

    It was abruptly cancelled Wednesday afternoon, but Na'Moks says he and the other hereditary chiefs were notified it was back on several hours later.

     

    He says they were told the cancellation was a "miscommunication."

     

    A spokesman for the office of the B.C. premier says the report of a rescheduled meeting is "promising," but the provincial government was not in a position to confirm it until Thursday morning.

     

    The federal governments could not immediately be reached for comment.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    World Isn't Ready For Coronavirus Outbreak, Says Canadian WHO Expert

    OTTAWA - A renowned Canadian epidemiologist who led a team of experts to China to study the novel coronavirus on behalf of the World Health Organization says other countries are not ready for a global outbreak.    

    World Isn't Ready For Coronavirus Outbreak, Says Canadian WHO Expert

    All Canadians Evacuated From Wuhan Released From Quarantine At CFB Trenton

    OTTAWA - Canada's top health official has released the final 195 Canadians and their families who were brought home from Wuhan, China after two weeks of observation for the novel coronavirus.    

    All Canadians Evacuated From Wuhan Released From Quarantine At CFB Trenton

    N.S. Liberal Budget Opens Spending Taps As Province Faces Slowing Economy

    N.S. Liberal Budget Opens Spending Taps As Province Faces Slowing Economy
    HALIFAX - With economic growth projected to flatten in 2020, Nova Scotia's Liberal government is opening the spending taps to fund roads and hospitals in its fifth consecutive balanced budget.

    N.S. Liberal Budget Opens Spending Taps As Province Faces Slowing Economy

    Canadian Organizations Grapple With Jean Vanier's Legacy After Sex Abuse Report

    The release of a report that found non-profit founder Jean Vanier sexually abused at least six women sent a shock wave through the Canadian institutions associated with him, leaving many facing difficult decisions on how to disassociate from a man once considered a hero.

    Canadian Organizations Grapple With Jean Vanier's Legacy After Sex Abuse Report

    Surrey Hospital Foundation’s 5th Annual Gala Raises Over $1.35 Million in Support of Surgery at Surrey Memorial Hospital

    On Saturday, February 22, 2020, 680 local business, community, medical, and philanthropic leaders attended the 5th Annual Celebration of Care Gala at Aria Banquet Centre in Surrey.

    Surrey Hospital Foundation’s 5th Annual Gala Raises Over $1.35 Million in Support of Surgery at Surrey Memorial Hospital

    Sen. Lynn Beyak Apologizes For Racist Letters, Says She'll Obey Ethics Report

    Beyak rose in the Senate today to address the report, saying she will comply with the committee's recommendations.

    Sen. Lynn Beyak Apologizes For Racist Letters, Says She'll Obey Ethics Report