The Canadian state brutally
violated the Rights of Unist’ot’en and Gidimt’en clans of
the Wet’suwet’en Nation, in the interests of the Oil and Gas
Barons. Demonstrations immediately occurred in over 30 cities as
thousands of Canadians showed they are fed up with Official Racism.
The RCMP moved to enforce a B.C.
Supreme Court injunction to allow pipeline workers to pass
through two Wet’suwet’en checkpoints on Jan. 9. A heavily
armed SWAT team attacked peaceful indigenous protesters
and violently arrested 14 land defenders.
Over the next two days, virtually
spontaneous demonstrations occurred in dozens of towns and cities in
reaction to repeated state violence against Indigenous people and
against the pollution that emanates from the global corporate profit
machine. Mass media was excluded by the cops from the site of the
attack, but photos taken by Indigenous bystanders show protesters
being cruelly attacked by many police officers, pushing their faces
into the snow.
The permanent Unist’ot’en camp,
and the more recently established Gidimt’en checkpoint, are part of
an ongoing effort by Wet’suwet’en hereditary leaders and members
to protect unceded lands from pipeline construction. “The proposed
pipelines are a threat to the watershed, as well as to the plants,
animals and communities that depend on them,” the Unist’ot’en
Camp states on its website.
While more than one proposed
pipeline would cross through Wet’suwet’en traditional
territory, Trans Canada’s Coastal GasLink project is at the
centre of the current injunction dispute.
The proposed Coastal GasLink
pipeline would span 670 kilometres across northern British Columbia.
It is intended to supply natural gas from near Dawson Creek, B.C., to
the planned LNG Canada export facility near Kitimat, B.C., where it
would be converted to liquefied natural gas for export. Construction
is estimated to cost about $4.8 billion.
According to LNG Canada, Coastal
GasLink would be the only pipeline to supply its facility in Kitimat,
B.C. on the Pacific coast. A company spokesperson called it an
“essential component of the LNG Canada project.” This $40 billion
project to be built by a global consortium will subject the entire
area to heavy gas fracking operations. Preliminary fracking was
recently halted in the wake of earthquakes. Moreover, the
project makes it impossible for B.C. to meet its carbon
reduction goals.
Jody Wilson-Raybould, recently
demoted by Prime Minister Trudeau from Justice Minister to Veterans’
Affairs Minister, issued a 1100-word tract on her demotion. Citing
the PM’s own words, that the relationship between Canada and
Indigenous people is the “most important” one, she reminds all
that “the work that must be done is well known,” and “legislative
and policy changes based on the recognition of title and rights,
including historic treaties, are urgently needed.” Toward the
end of her letter she pledges to “continue to be directly engaged”
in advancing “fundamental shifts.”
Wilson-Raybould is a woman of
Kwakwaka’wakw heritage who was previously the Regional Chief of the
BC Assembly of First Nations. And her words were being written the
week after a heavily armed RCMP contingent used force to remove
Wet’suwet’en activists from a “checkpoint” on the road to a
work camp for gas-line workers. The line crosses lands where, courts
have ruled, hereditary chiefs hold historic and traditional title.
Those chiefs, it seems, were not part of the “consultation and
accommodations” promised for the project.
The elected Band Council is a
creation of the colonial settler federal government-imposed Indian
Act of 1876, which treated Indigenous people as wards of the state,
essentially as children. In an attempt to destroy the traditional
basis of indigenous government, the Act created elected Band
Councils, which, the government assumed, could be more easily swayed
than traditional hereditary chiefs.
It turns out that was true in this
case. The Band Council came to terms with the Trans Canada
Pipeline. But the hereditary chiefs were not included and do oppose
the pipeline. The clans for the most part are following the
hereditary chiefs.
The big question remains: By what
right is Trans Canada Pipeline able to get a court injunction to
allow their workers onto un-ceded Indigenous land in the first place?
By what conceivable logic can the RCMP, claiming to be “neutral”
and merely “enforcing the law,” send heavily armed SWAT team
members onto Indigenous land and brutally attack a peaceful road
blockade, arresting 14 native land defenders in the process. The cops
are far from neutral. They are imposing the will of settler
capitalism on the Indigenous people. They are enforcing the laws of
the white man to seize Indigenous land and using it to generate white
profits.
The settler government has
consistently violated indigenous sovereignty and the right to
self-determination in the interests of white capitalist profit and
racist social policy. The Canadian federal government, for decades,
organized the forced removal of Indigenous children to brutal
Residential Schools. In those schools, many were physically, sexually
and psychologically abused, over-worked, under-fed and punished for
speaking their own language. Many children died.
In 2010, Ottawa endorsed the United
Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The latest
Trudeau/RCMP action violates the declaration dramatically. The racist
policy and practice has to cease. Trans Canada Pipeline should get
off Indigenous land. Protesters should be released and RCMP excluded
from Indigenous land. No to the pipeline! No to the LNG Canada
fracking operation! Self-determination for Indigenous people!
>> The article above was written by Gary Porter, and is reprinted from Socialist Action.
2 comments:
No to stateism. No to open boarders No to socialism. Direct democracy is totalitarianism. Say yes to Self determination for America.
Funny how the atheists have formed their own religion. Socialism is the opium of the masses. The state has your solution to everything. You trust that they know better than you. To plan everything. To lead you. To guide you. To show you how to exist
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