5 arrested after standing in way of Trans Mountain pipeline construction in B.C. Interior - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 11:33 AM | Calgary | -13.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

5 arrested after standing in way of Trans Mountain pipeline construction in B.C. Interior

Five people including a Secwepemc hereditary chiefand his daughter have been arrested after standing against construction of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project on Secwepemcterritoryin Kamloops, B.C.

Secwepemc hereditary chief, daughter among those arrested Thursday

One person is carried away from a work site on unceded Secwepemc territory near Kamloops, B.C., on Thursday after standing in the way of Trans Mountain pipeline construction along the Thompson River. (Submitted by Secwepemc Sacred Womans Fire Council)

Five people including a Secwepemc hereditary chiefand his daughter have been arrested after standing against construction of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project on Secwepemcterritoryin Kamloops, B.C.

A statement fromthe Sacred Woman's Fire Councilsaid the group was arrestednear a work site on Mission Flats Road on Thursday as pipeline crews prepared to drill underneath the Thompson River.

Those arrested includeHereditary Chief Segwses, Loralie Dick, April Thomas, Billie Pierreand Romilly Cavanaugh, the latter of whomis a former engineer for the Trans Mountain pipeline.

"Along with the direct action ...the Secwepemc delivered a Cease and Desist letter to TMX Pipeline corporation for the second time. The Secwepemc people did so under the direction of the Elder's Council stating the land has never been ceded or surrendered and no consent has ever been given for the colonial government or the Trans Mountain pipeline to enact the violent authority and jurisdiction they claim on Secwepemculecw," read the council's statement.

"We stand for clean water, wild salmon and for our future generations."

The project is tripling the capacity of the existing pipelinefrom the Edmonton area to the Westridge Marine Terminal in Burnaby, B.C. The portion of the pipeline in the B.C. Interior is being expanded from Kamloops to the summit of the Coquihalla Highway.

Crews are drilling under the Thompson River to pull the pipe through to the other side as part of the regional pipeline expansion. Work in Kamloops began in June.

In February, Hereditary Chief Segwses and his daughtergave themselves up for arrest voluntarily near Chase, B.C., after the RCMP moved in to end a railway blockade builtin support of Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs against construction of a different, natural gaspipeline.

A statement at the time said Segwses stepped forward to prevent RCMP from snuffing a sacred fire that was burning along the tracks and to prevent other Secwepemc nation members and supporters from being handcuffed.

RCMPstatement

RCMP said officers from a number of divisions were called to the work site around 12:40 p.m. on Thursday, after pipeline security staff said the demonstration at the gate was stopping them from doing their work.

Mounties said three people were arrested for allegedly violating a court-ordered injunction by blocking the workers' path.

A statement Friday said a fourth person wasarrested for "blocking an active work site on the south mountain slope" by attaching herself to a bulldozer. The fifth was arrested for mischief butreleased without charges after allegedly destroying survey stakes across the road from the drill site.

The first four people arrested are due in court on Jan. 20.

With files from Canadian Press