Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

Indigenous Pipeline Protesters Take Over B.C. Park, Displace Campers, Erect 'Tiny Homes'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jul, 2018 12:12 PM
    An Indigenous group calling itself the Tiny House Warriors has moved into the North Thompson River Provincial Park near Clearwater, B.C., in an effort to block the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.
     
     
    Group spokeswoman Kanahus Manuel says they are reclaiming an ancestral village their people were forced from many years ago, while at the same trying to prevent the expansion of the pipeline through their traditional territory.
     
     
    Manuel says they have moved into the site and will be building tiny houses on the land in an action that has the approval of the hereditary chiefs of the Secwepemc First Nation.
     
     
    She says Indigenous land defenders within the group will resist the construction of the pipeline through their territory.
     
     
    A statement from the provincial Ministry of Environment says BC Parks is maintaining the closure of the area while efforts are made to respectfully resolve the situation and it is offering refunds to those who have booked campsites.
     

    Tiny House Warriors reclaim land, block Trans Mountain Expansion pipeline route 11 July 2018 (UNCEDED SECWEPEMC...

    Posted by Kanahus Manuel on Wednesday, 11 July 2018
     
    The ministry says it recognizes the right to engage in peaceful protest, however it also recognizes that people, who simply want a camping experience are being inconvenienced.
     
     
    Manuel responded by saying her people have been inconvenienced by colonialism for over 150 years.
     
     
    "We were moved off of our lands. There are internationally protected rights which (say) Indigenous people can use and exclusively occupy their lands to maintain our culture, our language and our ways."
     
     
    She said no one from the provincial government has come to speak with them since the group cut off access to the main road into the camp.
     
     
    Many of the locals support their action, she said, because they don't want the pipeline expansion either.
     
     
     
     
    Although some people have been shouting racist slogans from the vehicles, she added.
     
     
    "We've had a few drive-by shoutings."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Victoria Police Officer Const. Ian Jordan Dies After Lying In A Coma Since 1987

    Victoria Police Officer Const. Ian Jordan Dies After Lying In A Coma Since 1987
    Victoria police Const. Ian Jordan died in hospital Wednesday after spending 30 years in a coma caused by his cruiser crashing into another police vehicle racing towards same call. 

    Victoria Police Officer Const. Ian Jordan Dies After Lying In A Coma Since 1987

    More Than A Dozen Canadians Charged In Global Child Sex Abuse Investigation

    More Than A Dozen Canadians Charged In Global Child Sex Abuse Investigation
    TORONTO — A sweeping global child exploitation investigation has led to more than 150 arrests around the world and either charges or convictions against 16 Canadians, Toronto police said Thursday.

    More Than A Dozen Canadians Charged In Global Child Sex Abuse Investigation

    5 Things To Know About Social And Economic Outcomes Of Immigrants To Canada

    5 Things To Know About Social And Economic Outcomes Of Immigrants To Canada
    The longer an immigrant is in Canada, the better off they are. Annual incomes of highly-skilled workers surpass the Canadian average soon after arrival and increase over time

    5 Things To Know About Social And Economic Outcomes Of Immigrants To Canada

    Police In Abbotsford, B.C., Seek Witnesses To Fatal Head-On Collision

    Police In Abbotsford, B.C., Seek Witnesses To Fatal Head-On Collision
    Officers say a Dodge Charger and Chevrolet Cavalier collided in September 2017 (on Whatcom Road), sending both drivers to hospital.

    Police In Abbotsford, B.C., Seek Witnesses To Fatal Head-On Collision

    B.C. Families Say They're Sidelined From Involvement In Addiction Treatment

    Deb Bailey said her 21-year-old daughter, Ola Bailey, was found dead in the stairwell of a building in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside in 2015, after overdosing on heroin laced with fentanyl.

    B.C. Families Say They're Sidelined From Involvement In Addiction Treatment

    Meeting With PM Won't Force B.C. To Off Its Pipeline Stand: Environment Minister

    Meeting With PM Won't Force B.C. To Off Its Pipeline Stand: Environment Minister
    British Columbia Environment Minister George Heyman says he doesn't expect the province to back down on its battle against the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion during a meeting Sunday with the prime minister and Alberta's premier.

    Meeting With PM Won't Force B.C. To Off Its Pipeline Stand: Environment Minister