Canadian indigenous group ordered workers off Coastal GasLink pipeline site
An indigenous group in the Canadian Pacific province of British Columbia says it has ordered workers to leave the site of TC Energy Corp.'s Coastal GasLink pipeline, the latest step in a protracted dispute.
Hereditary chiefs from the five clans of the Wet'suwet'en people, who oppose the project, have been trying for more than a year to force a halt to work in the north of the province.
The C$6.6 B pipeline will move natural gas from northeast British Columbia to the Pacific coast to feed the LNG Canada export terminal, which is under construction by Royal Dutch Shell and its partners. Some 28% of the 670-km (420-mile) route passes through Wet'suwet'en lands.
In a statement on Sunday, one of the clans, the Gidimt'en, said it had demanded Coastal GasLink employees leave the area. The company though said on its website that it was seeking dialogue but had not received any response.
Coastal, which is owned by private equity firm KKR & Co Inc., Alberta Investment Management Corp. and TC, says it is allowed to work on the pipeline, citing an injunction granted by the British Columbia Supreme Court in 2019 against blockades preventing access for workers. It says the protests are illegal.
No one at the company, the Gidimt'en or the Royal Canadian Mounted Police were immediately available for comment on Monday.
The dispute poses a potential challenge for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who has made reconciliation with Canada's marginalized aboriginal population a priority. He also says Canada will rely on fossil fuels for decades to come, however.
All of the elected indigenous band councils along Coastal GasLink's route support the project. But Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs oppose it and say they, not the community's elected officials, hold authority over traditional lands.
"The Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs have never ceded, surrendered, or lost in war, title to this territory. That means that what they say goes," a spokesman said in a statement.
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