Monday, February 2, 2026
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Police Say 33 Protestors Arrested Outside Port Of Vancouver

Darpan News Desk, 10 Feb, 2020 05:29 PM

    Vancouver police said 33 people were arrested early Monday as officers in the city and in nearby Delta enforced an injunction preventing blockades at entrances to the Port of Vancouver and the DeltaPort container terminal.

     

    Sgt. Aaron Roed said demonstrators were informed of the injunction Sunday night, shortly after it was obtained by the port authority, and those who refused to comply received several requests from police to clear blocked intersections before they were detained.

     

    Police said traffic was disrupted during the morning rush hour along a major street parallel to terminals located in the downtown Vancouver port, but a webcam showed traffic was flowing to DeltaPort, the region's largest container terminal, just after 8 a.m.

     

    Port disruptions began Friday by demonstrators acting in solidarity with Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs opposed to construction of the Coastal GasLink natural gas pipeline across their traditional territories in northwestern British Columbia.

     

    A spokeswoman for the protesters said the expedited, after-hours process used by the port authority to obtain the injunction on the weekend speaks to the impact of the demonstration.

     

    "We are actively disrupting the money that's coming in and out of the port to send a clear message that business as usual can't keep going on if Indigenous people are under attack," Natalie Knight said in a statement.

     

    Support for the Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs has sparked a protest movement that spans from the steps of the B.C. legislature in Victoria to rail lines in Ontario and Quebec.

     

    In northwestern B.C., Wet'suwet'en spokeswoman Jen Wickham said 14 people arrested for defying an exclusion zone along the remote construction site of the 670-kilometre Coastal GasLink pipeline were due in court Monday, charged with breach of trust.

     

    The RCMP said Saturday that officers enforcing a court injunction arrested those barricaded in a warming centre in a forested area near the work site and those people would join the handful of others arrested Friday at another Indigenous camp near the pipeline route.

     

    Premier John Horgan has said the pipeline, which is part of the massive $40 billion LNG Canada liquefied natural gas export terminal project, is of vital economic and social importance to the province's north and already has the approval of 20 elected First Nations councils along the route from Dawson Creek to Kitimat.

     

    He said the courts have decided the pipeline can proceed and the rule of law must prevail.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Some Canadians Returning From Wuhan Will Be Coming To BC

    Adrian Dix, Minister of Health, and Dr. Bonnie Henry, British Columbia’s provincial health officer, have issued the following joint statement regarding updates on the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) in British Columbia:

    Some Canadians Returning From Wuhan Will Be Coming To BC

    Noise Ticket Violates Edmonton Street Preacher's Charter Rights: Advocacy Group

    EDMONTON - A conservative legal advocacy organization says it will be representing a street preacher who was issued a ticket under a noise bylaw that the group alleges goes against his freedom of expression.    

    Noise Ticket Violates Edmonton Street Preacher's Charter Rights: Advocacy Group

    Upgrade On Track For Aging IT System Handling Old-age Benefits, Minister Says

    Upgrade On Track For Aging IT System Handling Old-age Benefits, Minister Says
    OTTAWA - Canada's seniors minister says work to update the computer system handling old-age security payments to a new platform is on track to be done by the end of the year.    

    Upgrade On Track For Aging IT System Handling Old-age Benefits, Minister Says

    Trudeau Faces Tough Campaigning In Africa For UN Security Council Seat

    OTTAWA - Suddenly, the Liberal government is all about Africa, and there is a very practical political reason for that — avoiding an embarrassing defeat in a major upcoming international election.

    Trudeau Faces Tough Campaigning In Africa For UN Security Council Seat

    Non-Citizen Parents Allowed To Return Home With Canadian Children From Wuhan

    "We insisted on the concept of family unity," Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said Monday in Ottawa.    

    Non-Citizen Parents Allowed To Return Home With Canadian Children From Wuhan

    Canada Post Asks Cannabis Producers To Stop Shipping To Campobello Island

    Canada Post has asked cannabis producers to stop shipping marijuana to a small island in Eastern Canada, in order to curb a sharp increase in the number of mail trucks being stopped and searched by U.S. border officials.

    Canada Post Asks Cannabis Producers To Stop Shipping To Campobello Island