Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. First Nation Serves Eviction Notice To Company That Wants To Build Gas Pipeline

The Canadian Press, 06 Jan, 2020 08:38 PM

    VANCOUVER - A First Nation in British Columbia has served a company that wants to build a natural gas pipeline through its territory an eviction notice.

     

    "This notice is to inform you that all Coastal GasLink staff and contractors currently trespassing on unceded Wet'suwet'en territory must vacate our territory immediately," reads a letter from the First Nation's hereditary chiefs to the company whose $6.6-billion pipeline would transport natural gas across 670 kilometres from northeastern B.C. to the LNG Canada export terminal in Kitimat.

     

    Coastal GasLink workers and contractors in the area near Houston, B.C., complied with the notice peacefully Saturday night, confirmed two spokespeople for Indigenous groups.

     

    A spokeswoman for Coastal GasLink, Suzanne Wilton, said in an emailed statement that "the only people on site Saturday were security staff." The company expects construction to resume this week after a holiday break, she wrote.

     

    At first, the workers were reluctant, said Na'Moks, who also goes by John Ridsdale and is the highest ranking hereditary chief of Tsayu, one of the five clans that make up the First Nation.

     

    He estimates it took workers between 90 minutes and two hours to leave.

     

    Coastal GasLink, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment beyond the emailed statement, said on its website that it received the notice.

     

    It "demanded that we remove our equipment from areas in which we are legally permitted to operate," the company said.

     

    Coastal GasLink also said it was notified on Jan. 3 by Unist'ot'en that the Indigenous group intends to terminate an access agreement effective Jan. 10.

     

    The company's workers also discovered felled trees early Sunday morning that make a road impassable, it said.

     

    "While it is unclear who felled these trees, this action is a clear violation of the interlocutory injunction as it prevents our crews from accessing work areas," it said in the statement.

     

    On Dec. 31, the B.C. Supreme Court granted the company an injunction against members of the Wet'suwet'en First Nation and others who oppose the company's pipeline.

     

    Na'Moks said his group's position is that the ruling was misinformed.

     

    Coastal GasLink said it was "disappointed" Unist'ot'en decided to terminate the agreement after it was in place for a year and is requesting to meet with the group and hereditary chiefs as soon as possible.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Three Charged In Connection With Protest Outside PPC Event In Hamilton

    Three Charged In Connection With Protest Outside PPC Event In Hamilton
    The Al Soufi family was forced to close its Toronto restaurant earlier this month after they said they received hundreds of death threats over their son Alaa Al Soufi's participation in the rally.

    Three Charged In Connection With Protest Outside PPC Event In Hamilton

    Alberta Finance Minister Says First Budget To Attack Spending, Not Services

    EDMONTON - Alberta Finance Minister Travis Toews says the first budget of the new United Conservative government will surgically attack spending but not at the expense of essential services.    

    Alberta Finance Minister Says First Budget To Attack Spending, Not Services

    Everything Is Interrelated:' Scientists Write Family Tree For Tree Of Life

    "Everything is interrelated," said the University of Alberta's Gane Wong, one of the paper's dozens of co-authors.

    Everything Is Interrelated:' Scientists Write Family Tree For Tree Of Life

    Police Investigate After Montreal Man, Two Children Found Dead In Apparent Murder Suicide

    Montreal police are investigating the discovery of the bodies of two children and their father as an apparent double murder followed by a suicide.

    Police Investigate After Montreal Man, Two Children Found Dead In Apparent Murder Suicide

    Closing Arguments: Crown Says Accused In Edmonton Attack Meant To Cause Chaos

    EDMONTON - A Crown prosecutor says a man accused of stabbing an Edmonton police officer and striking four pedestrians with a van went to extraordinary lengths to cause as much "chaos, destruction and indiscriminate death" as possible.

    Closing Arguments: Crown Says Accused In Edmonton Attack Meant To Cause Chaos

    Jody Wilson-Raybould Should Use Social Media To Amplify Her Voice: Experts

    VANCOUVER - In the early years of Confederation, there were members of Parliament known as "loose fish," who floated free from parties but swam back and forth between allegiances.    

    Jody Wilson-Raybould Should Use Social Media To Amplify Her Voice: Experts