Sunday, December 28, 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

    Teens Cause $20,000 Damage At 'Uncontrolled' House Party In West Vancouver: Police

    Teens Cause $20,000 Damage At 'Uncontrolled' House Party In West Vancouver: Police
    West Vancouver police say the owners of the house do not want to pursue criminal charges and the family of the girl who rented it have agreed to cover the cost.

    Teens Cause $20,000 Damage At 'Uncontrolled' House Party In West Vancouver: Police

    Man Pleads Guilty To Second-degree Murder In 2011 Death Of B.C. Teen

    Man Pleads Guilty To Second-degree Murder In 2011 Death Of B.C. Teen
      Matthew Foerster was previously convicted of first-degree murder in 2014 for the death of Taylor Van Diest.

    Man Pleads Guilty To Second-degree Murder In 2011 Death Of B.C. Teen

    Belgian Deputy PM Says A Trudeau Meeting With Royals Would Have Been Nice

    Belgian Deputy PM Says A Trudeau Meeting With Royals Would Have Been Nice
    High-ranking Belgian officials played down a perceived snub of the Belgian king and queen by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as the royal couple carried on day two of their week-long state visit to Canada.

    Belgian Deputy PM Says A Trudeau Meeting With Royals Would Have Been Nice

    'Mind-Blowing': Survey Finds Most Vegans, Vegetarians In Canada Are Under 35

    'Mind-Blowing': Survey Finds Most Vegans, Vegetarians In Canada Are Under 35
    The poll, conducted for Dalhousie University professor Dr. Sylvain Charlebois, reported that 7.1 per cent of Canadians consider themselves vegetarians, and 2.3 per cent consider themselves vegans — levels he says were not previously known.

    'Mind-Blowing': Survey Finds Most Vegans, Vegetarians In Canada Are Under 35

    Remains Pulled From B.C. Pulp Mill Pond Are Those Of Missing Wildfire Evacuee

    Remains Pulled From B.C. Pulp Mill Pond Are Those Of Missing Wildfire Evacuee
    Kamloops RCMP say foul play is not suspected in the death of David Jeff.

    Remains Pulled From B.C. Pulp Mill Pond Are Those Of Missing Wildfire Evacuee

    British Columbia Expands Medical Coverage For Those With Chronic Hepatitis C

    British Columbia Expands Medical Coverage For Those With Chronic Hepatitis C
    Anyone who has chronic hepatitis C in British Columbia will be able to get treatment covered by British Columbia's PharmaCare program under changes announced by the provincial government.

    British Columbia Expands Medical Coverage For Those With Chronic Hepatitis C