Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau To Issue 'Statement Of Exoneration' For Tsilhqot'in Chiefs

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Mar, 2018 12:31 PM
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is exonerating six First Nations chiefs who were executed by British Columbia's colonial government more than 150 years ago.
     
     
    Trudeau is on his feet in the House of Commons to deliver a "statement of exoneration" for the Tsilhqot'in chiefs, who were hanged following a deadly confrontation with white road builders during the so-called "Chilcotin War of 1864."
     
     
    After the workers were killed, five chiefs arrived at what they believed would be peace talks with government representatives. Instead, they were arrested, tried and hanged, and a sixth chief was executed the following year in New Westminster.
     
     
    The Tsilhqot'in have long disputed the government's authority to execute the six chiefs as criminals, describing the confrontation as an altercation between warring nations.
     
     
    The B.C. government apologized for the executions in 1993 and installed a commemorative plaque at the site of the hangings.
     
     
    Following the exoneration, Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett was to hold a press conference alongside the Tsilhqot'in Nation leadership, members of whom were on the floor of the legislative chamber for Trudeau's statement.
     
     
    We Meant War, not Murder: Continuing the Work of our Chilcotin War Chiefs of 1864/65

    On March 26th the Prime Minister of Canada will officially exonerate the six Chilcotin War Chiefs of any wrongdoing. While standing where the war Chiefs were wrongly executed 154 years ago, Tsilhqot’in leadership explain what this exoneration means to the people and looks forward to a new path with Canada.

    Posted by Tsilhqot'in National Government on Wednesday, 21 March 2018
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Set Up Tip Line To Find Source Of B.C.'s Largest Forest Fire In 2017

    Police Set Up Tip Line To Find Source Of B.C.'s Largest Forest Fire In 2017
    CLINTON, B.C. — RCMP say they're looking for help in finding the source of a human caused wildfire that burned nearly 2,000 square kilometres of forest, brush and buildings in British Columbia last year.

    Police Set Up Tip Line To Find Source Of B.C.'s Largest Forest Fire In 2017

    ICBC In 'Financial Dumpster Fire,' Major Reforms Needed: David Eby

    ICBC In 'Financial Dumpster Fire,' Major Reforms Needed: David Eby
    VANCOUVER — Major reforms are on the way to extinguish a "financial dumpster fire" at British Columbia's public auto insurer, which projects a $1.3-billion net loss this fiscal year, the province's attorney general said Monday.

    ICBC In 'Financial Dumpster Fire,' Major Reforms Needed: David Eby

    Lawyer: Expel 'Dirty Dancing' Foreigners From Cambodia

    Lawyer: Expel 'Dirty Dancing' Foreigners From Cambodia
    Two Canadian women — Eden Kazoleas, 20, and Jessica Drolet, 25 — are among the foreigners detained. Global Affairs Canada said it was providing consular services to the Canadians in Cambodia.

    Lawyer: Expel 'Dirty Dancing' Foreigners From Cambodia

    Lawyers File Class-action Lawsuit For Former Patients At Indian Hospitals

    A statement of claim filed in Toronto says Indigenous patients suffered consistent physical and sexual assaults at the 29 hospitals from 1945 until the last one closed in 1981.

    Lawyers File Class-action Lawsuit For Former Patients At Indian Hospitals

    Air Canada's 787 Dreamliner Non-Stop Vancouver-Delhi Flights Become Year-Round Beginning June 2018

    Air Canada's 787 Dreamliner Non-Stop Vancouver-Delhi Flights Become Year-Round Beginning June 2018
    Customer response to our nonstop Vancouver-Delhi seasonal flights initially launched in 2016 has been extremely positive, and we are very pleased to extend the only flights between Western Canada and India to year-round beginning in June

    Air Canada's 787 Dreamliner Non-Stop Vancouver-Delhi Flights Become Year-Round Beginning June 2018

    Vancouver Renters' Union Forms To Fight Soaring Costs In City's Housing Market

    Vancouver Renters' Union Forms To Fight Soaring Costs In City's Housing Market
    VANCOUVER — Rising rental costs, evictions and a scarcity of units in Vancouver's densely populated West End were among the reasons for Gail Harmer's decision to join a group that is taking a new approach to advocating for the rights and protection of tenants.

    Vancouver Renters' Union Forms To Fight Soaring Costs In City's Housing Market