Wednesday, May 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Wet'suwet'en Hereditary Chiefs To Meet Today With Federal And B.C. Governments

Darpan News Desk, 27 Feb, 2020 08:14 PM

    HOUSTON, B.C. - A meeting between Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs and the federal and British Columbia government is expected to take place today.

     

    Nationwide rail and road blockades have been popping up for weeks as a show of support for the hereditary chiefs of the First Nation in northwestern B.C., who oppose a natural gas pipeline project cutting across their traditional territory.

     

    Chief Na'Moks, who is also known as John Ridsdale, says the meeting scheduled to start this afternoon and continue Friday.

     

    It was abruptly cancelled Wednesday afternoon, but Na'Moks says he and the other hereditary chiefs were notified it was back on several hours later.

     

    He says they were told the cancellation was a "miscommunication."

     

    A spokesman for the office of the B.C. premier says the report of a rescheduled meeting is "promising," but the provincial government was not in a position to confirm it until Thursday morning.

     

    The federal governments could not immediately be reached for comment.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Making Preparations To Tackle Coronavirus Now Present In 39 Countries

    VICTORIA - British Columbia's provincial health officer says plans are in the works to expand the province's battle against the novel coronavirus, which has been diagnosed in seven people.    

    B.C. Making Preparations To Tackle Coronavirus Now Present In 39 Countries

    Acceptance Of Cash Deposits Rare In Real Estate, Money Laundering Inquiry Hears

    Acceptance Of Cash Deposits Rare In Real Estate, Money Laundering Inquiry Hears
    VANCOUVER - The organization representing real estate agents in British Columbia has told a provincial inquiry into money laundering that its members have only ever accepted modest cash deposits in rare circumstances.    

    Acceptance Of Cash Deposits Rare In Real Estate, Money Laundering Inquiry Hears

    Alberta Tourist Dies After Plunge From 70 Metre Cliff In Stanley Park

    Alberta Tourist Dies After Plunge From 70 Metre Cliff In Stanley Park
    Police confirm the 26-year-old hopped a chest-high fence at Prospect Point on Sunday and plunged about 70 metres to a walkway below.

    Alberta Tourist Dies After Plunge From 70 Metre Cliff In Stanley Park

    Seaplane Theft: Vancouver Police Release Suspect Images

    Vancouver Police are asking for the public’s help in identifying the man who broke into the Harbour Air seaplane terminal in the Vancouver harbour on Friday and stole a seaplane.

    Seaplane Theft: Vancouver Police Release Suspect Images

    TSB Investigating Fire In Landing Gear Of Air Canada Jazz Plane In Montreal

    TSB Investigating Fire In Landing Gear Of Air Canada Jazz Plane In Montreal
    The agency says no injuries were reported and no emergency evacuation of the plane was required.

    TSB Investigating Fire In Landing Gear Of Air Canada Jazz Plane In Montreal

    Canada's Quest To Buy New Fighter Jets Delayed Another Three Months

    Canada’s long-running effort to buy new fighter jets is facing another delay.

    Canada's Quest To Buy New Fighter Jets Delayed Another Three Months