Close X
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

Wet'suwet'en Need Time To Mull Deal: Trudeau

The Canadian Press, 03 Mar, 2020 08:08 PM

    OTTAWA - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he knows people are impatient for a resolution to tensions involving a disputed natural gas pipeline in northern British Columbia, but time is needed to respect the traditions of the Wet'suwet'en people.

     

    Speaking to reporters in Halifax Tuesday, Trudeau acknowledged the opposition of some Wet'suwet'en leaders to the Coastal GasLink pipeline has led to difficult times for many Canadians over the past few weeks.

     

    He said his government has been focused on trying to find a solution, but added that current tensions stem from Canada's dark history of mistreatment of Indigenous Peoples in Canada.

     

    "We know that centuries of marginalization, of oppressive, broken government policies have created a situation that is untenable," Trudeau said.

     

    "It is not an easy process. It is a process we are all impatient with that needs to move forward, but we need to remain positive because the only path forward for our country is for all of us to work together and that is what we're going to stay focused on doing."

     

    Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs and senior federal and B.C. cabinet ministers reached a proposed agreement over the weekend, but details are not being released until the Wet'suwet'en people are consulted through their traditional feast protocol, which could take up to two weeks.

     

    Trudeau says his government is respecting this process, and will not discuss details of the agreement until the Wet'suwet'en "have an opportunity to share it and discuss it internally," he said.

     

    But the prime minister also sidestepped a question about how the deal will affect the pipeline project.

     

    All parties have made it clear the agreement touches only land and title rights generally. The liquefied natural gas pipeline itself remains in dispute.

     

    B.C. Premier John Horgan said Monday the pipeline project will go ahead.

     

    "This project is underway. It has been approved and ratified. It's going to be completed," Horgan told the B.C. legislature Monday.

     

    He noted the tentative agreement with the Wet'suwet'en chiefs is "forward looking," dealing with their role in future discussions of land rights.

     

    "There was not, at any time, any objective to go in and convince people to have a different point of view. We had a frank discussion. There was disagreement. The project will proceed. Dissent is appropriate. Unlawful dissent is not," Horgan said.

     

    Trudeau noted the federal and provincial governments had been working previously with the Wet'suwet'en Nation on rights issues, including a deal signed with Ottawa in 2018 giving the Wet'suwet'en full jurisdiction over their own child and family services.

     

    The new deal, if agreed to by the community, will build on this work, Trudeau said.

     

    While not saying so overtly, Trudeau's remarks intimated that Ottawa hopes the deal can help lower the opposition to the LNG pipeline project.

     

    "Obviously we have come to what is hopefully a new level of solutions and collaboration with this most recent agreement," Trudeau said.

     

    "We understand that this is a challenging situation for everyone, but we must remain committed to reconciliation and to the respect and partnership that must underly the path forward we take."

     

    Meanwhile, Canadian National Railway Co. has started to recall most of the 450 workers temporarily laid off last month during the height of rail blockades that brought the company's eastern network to a near standstill.

     

    The blockades sidelined more than 1,400 freight and passenger trains and, according to analyst estimates, cost the company scores of millions of dollars.

     

    CN chief executive JJ Ruest says the recovery process will take several weeks as shipments of bulk and consumer products ramp up.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Airbnb Limits Young People's Ability To Rent Properties Following Deadly Shooting

    Airbnb Limits Young People's Ability To Rent Properties Following Deadly Shooting
    TORONTO - Airbnb says it will limit young adults' ability to book some properties in Canada in a bid to cut down on unauthorized parties like the one where three young men were killed in Toronto over the weekend.    

    Airbnb Limits Young People's Ability To Rent Properties Following Deadly Shooting

    Omar Khadr Told To Answer Utah Plaintiffs' Questions About His Confession

    Omar Khadr Told To Answer Utah Plaintiffs' Questions About His Confession
    Relatives of a slain American soldier have won a skirmish in their attempt to collect on a US$134-million wrongful-death award against former Guantanamo Bay detainee Omar Khadr.    

    Omar Khadr Told To Answer Utah Plaintiffs' Questions About His Confession

    Impeachment, Shmimpeachment: Trump Plans To Run, And Win, On Economic Record

    Impeachment, Shmimpeachment: Trump Plans To Run, And Win, On Economic Record
    President Donald Trump declared his scorched-earth political style an unmitigated success Tuesday in a fiercely partisan, made-for-TV state of the union speech that made it clear he expects to be back in the White House 

    Impeachment, Shmimpeachment: Trump Plans To Run, And Win, On Economic Record

    People's Party Leader Maxime Bernier Sues Political Pundit For Defamation

    A former member of Parliament and leader of a fringe federal political party is suing a prominent political commentator and strategist for defamation.    

    People's Party Leader Maxime Bernier Sues Political Pundit For Defamation

    Montreal To Fully Ban Plastic Bags By End Of 2020, Mayor Announces

    Montreal To Fully Ban Plastic Bags By End Of 2020, Mayor Announces
    MONTREAL - Given the urgent need to reduce the city's environmental footprint, Montreal will move to fully ban the distribution of plastic bags by the end of 2020, Mayor Valerie Plante said Wednesday.    

    Montreal To Fully Ban Plastic Bags By End Of 2020, Mayor Announces

    Crosswinds Hold Up Chartered Flight Taking Canadians From Wuhan

    Crosswinds Hold Up Chartered Flight Taking Canadians From Wuhan
    More than 200 Canadians due to be evacuated from the Chinese city of Wuhan should continue making their way to the airport if they are already on their way, even though their flight out of the centre of the new coronavirus outbreak

    Crosswinds Hold Up Chartered Flight Taking Canadians From Wuhan