Feds hope to meet with Wet’suwet’en chiefs and negotiate end to blockades
OTTAWA — Traditional chiefs from British Columbia at the heart of the Coastal GasLink pipeline protest are now in eastern Ontario, where federal cabinet ministers hope their proximity to the capital might mean a chance to sit down and talk about de-escalating the current impasse.
Blockades raised by Indigenous people and other supporters of the Wet’suwet’en First Nation’s hereditary leaders have stopped rail traffic in eastern Canada and temporarily blocked roads, bridges and ports across the country.
The Wet’suwet’en’s hereditary chiefs oppose the pipeline that would bring natural gas to a liquefaction facility and export terminal on the B.C. coast. But others in the community do support the project, including 20 First Nations bands along the route that have signed agreements with Coastal GasLink.
On Thursday, RCMP in B.C. sent a letter to the hereditary chiefs saying the force intends to move its officers out of the territory and station them instead in the nearby town of Houston.