Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Protesters On Either Side Of Trans Mountain Debate Clash At Vancouver Rally

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jun, 2019 09:28 PM

    VANCOUVER — Protesters on either side of the debate over the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion clashed at a rally organized by the project's supporters in Vancouver today.


    Lynn Nellis of the Canada Action Coalition was speaking to the crowd of a few dozen people when anti-pipeline protester Kwiis Hamilton began playing rock music.


    Rally attendees asked him to stop but Hamilton persisted.


    Vancouver police responded when Hamilton was shoved.


    Afterwards, Hamilton said he interrupted the rally because he wants to defend the land along the B.C. coastline where his ancestors have lived for generations.


    Several First Nation leaders who support the project spoke at the rally, including Shane Gottfriedson of Project Reconciliation, an Indigenous-led coalition that hopes to buy 51 per cent of the expansion project.


    Gottfriedson says a few Indigenous bands have joined Project Reconciliation and they're prepared to offer the federal government a fair price for the project, which has been approved by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government for a second time.


    "For many decades a lot of First Nations have been a part of the oil and gas industry and this opportunity to buy the Trans Mountain pipeline is a one-time opportunity and we're hoping to make the best of it," he said.


    Clifford Sampare, a hereditary chief of the Gitxsan Nation, told the rally the pipeline expansion will bring benefits to all of B.C.


    "Imagine the revenue it'll generate for Canada," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Struggling B.C. Adoption Agency Elects New Board That Intends To Keep It Open

    Struggling B.C. Adoption Agency Elects New Board That Intends To Keep It Open
    A Vancouver Island adoption agency that is struggling with a decline in foreign adoptions has been saved from closure.

    Struggling B.C. Adoption Agency Elects New Board That Intends To Keep It Open

    Last Member Of Vancouver Baseball Team That Fought Racism Helps Unveil New Stamp

    BURNABY, B.C. — A new Canada Post stamp honours an amateur Japanese-Canadian baseball team that used sport to battle racism and discrimination.    

    Last Member Of Vancouver Baseball Team That Fought Racism Helps Unveil New Stamp

    Surrey Stabbing Leave 32-Year-Old Man With ‘Potentially Life-Altering Injuries’

    Surrey Stabbing Leave 32-Year-Old Man With ‘Potentially Life-Altering Injuries’
    On April 23, 2019 at approximately 8:07 pm, Surrey RCMP responded to a report of a stabbing in the 13700 block of 97A Avenue.    

    Surrey Stabbing Leave 32-Year-Old Man With ‘Potentially Life-Altering Injuries’

    Surrey RCMP Arrest 17-Year-Old With Loaded Handgun In Whalley Athletic Park

    Surrey RCMP Arrest 17-Year-Old With Loaded Handgun In Whalley Athletic Park
    Surrey RCMP is advising the public of an arrest of a youth which took place in the Whalley Athletic park over the weekend.

    Surrey RCMP Arrest 17-Year-Old With Loaded Handgun In Whalley Athletic Park

    Latest Targeted Surrey, B.C., Shooting, Kills 32-Year-Old Sechelt Man Khan Michael Bourne

    Homicide investigators in Metro Vancouver say a 32-year-old Sechelt, B.C., man is the latest victim of a targeted shooting in Surrey.  

    Latest Targeted Surrey, B.C., Shooting, Kills 32-Year-Old Sechelt Man Khan Michael Bourne

    BC SPCA Searches For Person Who Left Day-Old Kittens In Vancouver Dumpster

    BC SPCA Searches For Person Who Left Day-Old Kittens In Vancouver Dumpster
    The society's senior animal protection officer, Eileen Drever, says the kittens were discovered Friday in a dumpster inside a secured parking area of a building in the city's West End.

    BC SPCA Searches For Person Who Left Day-Old Kittens In Vancouver Dumpster