Starting on November 18, Canadaโs RCMP violently cracked down on a group of Indigenous land defenders who had sought to block the construction of a major natural gas pipeline in northern British Columbia, arresting roughly 15 people over a two-day period. The RCMP also detained two journalists covering the events.
The Coastal GasLink pipeline, under construction by TC Energy, will bring fracked natural gas from British Columbia to the Pacific Coast for export at a facility partly owned by oil giant Shell. The pipeline crosses unceded territory of the Wetโsuwetโen, whose hereditary leaders never consented to the project.
The arrests of Amber Bracken, who was on assignment for The Narwhal, and Michael Toledano, a filmmaker who has been making a documentary for the past three years, were widely condemned by journalism and freedom of the press organizations.
Update 11/23/2021: On the evening of November 22, both Amber Bracken and Michael Toledano were released from custody. The Narwhal reports that the RCMP had been tracking and collecting information on both journalists in a national database prior to the raid. After his release, Toledano posted to Twitter, stating that one officer gloated at his arrest. In a statement, the RCMP claimed that the reporters did not identify themselves immediately. The RCMP official, Assistant Commissioner Eric Stubbs, said he โunderstands the important constitutional role the media play in Canada,โ and going forward, โI remain available and willing to work with the media on ensuring there are clear communications, processes, and understanding for all those involved.โ
Update 11/24/2021: After his release, Michael Toledano published footage of the raid that he recorded. The video shows RCMP breaking into a tiny house where Wet’suwet’en were sheltering. The officers used an ax, K-9 units, and pointed rifles at the people inside. The two journalists were inside documenting the situation, and the video depicts them identifyingย themselves as members of the press before RCMP arrested them.ย Democracy Now aired more footage recorded by Toledano which included the moment that he and Amber Bracken were arrested.
โItโs completely and utterly shocking the extent to which the RCMP are going to prevent journalists from covering events that are happening in the public interest,โ Brent Jolly, president of the Canadian Association of Journalists (CAJ) said in a statement.
For years, the Wetโsuwetโen have been fighting the construction of the pipeline, but the project reached a critical moment in recent months, when Coastal GasLink (CGL) sought to drill underneath the Wedzin Kwa (Morice River), a pristine river in northern BC whose headwaters are sacred to the Wetโsuwetโen.
In response, members of the Gidimtโen Clan of the Wetโsuwetโen occupied the drill site in September to block access and interrupt the drilling plans, using the mantra โAll out for Wedzin Kwaโ to describe and promote their campaign.
On November 14, the Gidimtโen Clan enforced an eviction of CGL employees from their territory, occupying a forest road that cut the pipeline company off from the site.
โThe Wetโsuwetโen hereditary chiefs have never ceded, surrendered, or lost in war, title to this territory. That means that what they say goes,โ said Sleydoโ Molly Wickham, a Gidimtโen Clan spokesperson who was among those arrested. In the eviction notice, the Gidimtโen Clan pointed to a 1997 Supreme Court of Canada ruling that affirmed that Aboriginal title has never been extinguished.
It was this move to evict CGL pipeline workers that prompted the forced intervention by RCMP days later.
On November 18, with BC still responding to the widespread damage from the recent โatmospheric riverโ event that flooded the interior part of the province and left 17,000 people displaced from their homes, the RCMP flew police into Smithers, a regional airport, from which they could launch an assault on the occupation near Wedzin Kwa.
Itโs a remarkable backdrop. After several months of climate crises that have ravaged BC, militarized police were cracking down on Indigenous land defenders to ensure that the construction of a gas pipeline โ which will worsen the climate crisis โ remains on schedule.
Over the next 48 hours, RCMP conducted a raid, brandishing sniper rifles and using K-9 units, to break up the blockade. They arrested at least 15 people.
โThe Wetโsuwetโen people, under the governance of their hereditary Chiefs, are standing in the way of the largest fracking project in Canadian history. Our medicines, our berries, our food, the animals, our water, our culture, our homes are all here since time immemorial,โ Sleydoโ Molly Wickham of the Wetโsuwetโen said prior to her arrest. โWe will never abandon our children to live in a world with no clean water. We uphold our ancestral responsibilities. There will be no pipelines on Wet’suwet’en territory.โ
In a statement on November 19, CGL said that the RCMP raid was โunfortunate,โ but that it was needed to restore โlawful access.โ
The arrest of two journalists also sparked outrage.
โJournalism is not a crime,โ Emma Gilchrist, Editor-in-Chief of The Narwhal, said in a statement. โAmberโs arrest โ along with the arrest of freelance filmmaker Michael Toledano โ marks just the latest in a long string of illegal RCMP actions against journalists.โ
The Narwhal and a coalition of other media outlets successfully led a legal challenge against the RCMP just a few months ago after police blocked media access to the protests of old-growth logging at the Fairy Creek blockade on Vancouver Island in July. The RCMP used heavy-handed tactics to break up the protest encampment. The BC Supreme Court ruled that the policeโs attempt to restrict media access was unlawful.
โRCMP crackdown on journalists has reached a crescendo. In the last year, journalists have been impeded, targeted, and arrested by the authorities while covering some of the most critical stories in Canada,โ Kiran Nazish, founder of the Coalition for Women in Journalism, said in a statement. โWe are surprised that these violations continue. We highly condemn the arrest and charges against a respectable journalist like Amber Bracken, who has been diligently reporting on a story that affects the Canadian public. We see this arrest as a violation of freedom of press. We also see these violations against journalists as a breach of police responsibilities and demand the RCMP put a stop to this trend.โ
Protests in solidarity with the Wetโsuwetโen sprung up around Canada over the weekend.
At the time of this writing, after spending several days in jail, the people arrested at the Wetโsuwetโen blockade were scheduled for release. But CGL is seeking conditions for their release, which include denying those arrested future access to large swathes of Wetโsuwetโen territory except for certain cultural activities. The Gidimtโen Clan said the conditions would set a โdangerous precedent.โ
CGL also wants the injunction applied to the two journalists.
CGL is reportedly asking Sleydoโ Molly Wickham to โproveโ that she is Wetโsuwetโen, a condition that Jen Wickham, media coordinator for Gidimtโen Checkpoint, said is โcompletely racist and sexist.โ
โIndustryโs reliance on the racist and oppressive legal weapon of injunctions is a way to maintain the continued dispossession and criminalization of Indigenous peoples,โ Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, President of the Union of BC Indian Chiefs, said in a statement. โBy dragging us through court and using injunctions against us, our Indigenous rights are being violated and are given less consideration than climate-destroying corporations.โ
He continued: โWe are calling for the release of all Wetโsuwetโen land defenders, and for BC and Canada to uphold Indigenous Title and Rights and institute a moratorium on fossil fuel expansion in the wake of clear and present climate catastrophe.โ
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