A global movement is granting rivers legal personhood. Could the Gatineau River be next? - Action News
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A global movement is granting rivers legal personhood. Could the Gatineau River be next?

A global movement to grant rivers legal personhood recently reached Canada and a local Indigenous leader is asking whether the Gatineau River could be next.

Former Kitigan Zibi Anishinbeg chief is pushing for the legal designation

The Gatineau River flows past a sign along Quebec Route 105 near Farrellton, Que. on May 28, 2022.
The Gatineau River, shown here near Farrellton, Que., could be the next Canadian river to receive legal personhood. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

A global movement to grant rivers legal personhood recently reached Canada, and a local Indigenous leader is asking whether the Gatineau River could be next.

FormerKitigan Zibi Anishinbeg chief Gilbert Whiteduck said such legal designation would providethe Gatineau River better environmental protection, and he's "pushing" to make it a reality.

The movement, which islargely led byIndigenous communities, environmental groups and scientists,isdesigned to afford rivers and otherecologicalfeaturesstronger legal protections by granting them rights normally reserved for people.

"I believe that, as an Algonquin Anishinbeg, we need to work together to protect the land," Whiteduck told CBC's All In A Day.

"A lot of people that I've met older people, family members say yes, this is something we can do together."

Gilbert Whiteduck is clinical coordinator at the Wanaki Center, on the Kitigan Zibi reserve of the Anishinabe nation.
Gilbert Whiteduck, former Kitigan Zibi Anishinbeg chief and current clinical coordinator at the Wanaki Center, told CBC he's pushing to get the Gatineau River legally recognized as a person. (Radio-Canada/Patrick Louiseize)

Whiteduck said the Gatineau River is a culturally and historically significant waterway for the Algonquin Anishinbeg people, and local groups may soon attempt tofollow Indigenous bands from around the world by expanding the river's protections through the emerging tool of environmental rights.

'Part of the planet'

The global movement to grant rivers legal personhood began in New Zealand in 2014.

After decades of fighting land claims related to the Whanganui River, a Morination won a legal settlement in 2021 that granted the river the legal rights of "an indivisible and living whole" in other words, a person.

This settlement was the first example of courts extending legal personhood to a non-human or inanimate object.

Since then, hundreds of similar rights-based environmental protections have appeared around the world, although these efforts have been largely concentrated in New Zealand, the United States and Ecuador.

The approach first reached Canada with the protection of the Muteshekau-shipu, or Magpie River, in Quebec's Cte-Nord region.

In February 2021, the Innu Council of Ekuanitshit and the Minganie Regional County Municipality passed parallel resolutions that assigned the river nine legal rights, including the right to be preserved and the right to take legal action.

As a result, the legal status means the body of water represented by "guardians" appointed by the regional municipality and the Innu could theoretically sue the government.

The Magpie River in Quebec.
The Magpie River in Quebec, shown here in a handout photo, was the first Canadian river to be legally recognized as a person. (The Canadian Press/HO-Boreal River)

"We have been thinking that we are masters of the world," said Yenny Vega Crdenas, a Quebec lawyer and president of the International Observatory on the Rights of Nature. "We need to understand that we are not the master, but we are part of the planet."

Last week, Crdenas joined both the chief of the Ekuanitshit council and the mayor of Minganie in a presentation on legal protections for the Magpie River at the United Nations water conference in New York City.

What about the Gatineau River?

Crdenas said she wonders whether the Magpie River may produce a "butterfly effect" in Canada the idea that a small movementcan have larger effects elsewhere.

Although Crdenas wasn't aware of an attempt to grant the Gatineau River legal personhood, she added she's "happy" to hear the project may be gaining traction.

"The physical goal is to make rivers fishable, drinkable and swimmable," she said. "It's not very difficult, but at this time, rivers are not able to fulfilthose expectations."

The Friends of the Gatineau River wrote in an email to CBC that it's too early for the organization to discuss its potential involvement, butaddedthatit would be in touch when the project is ready to launch.

Crdenas is currently pushing for the St. Lawrence River to be recognized as a legal person by both Canada's Parliament and Quebec's National Assembly.

"The status quo is no longer acceptable," she said. "We need to have a strong water law framework, and I think legal personhood is the future for water around the world."

Whiteduck is hoping to channel the same framework a little further upstream.

"I'm pushing, and I'm trying to sow the seed that Gatineau River would receive that," he said. "I believe we need to protect it."