Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Watching TV helps birds make better food choices

Watching TV helps birds make better food choices
Credit: University of Cambridge
By watching videos of each other eating, blue tits and great tits can learn to avoid foods that taste disgusting and are potentially toxic, a new study has found. Seeing the 'disgust response' in others helps them recognise distasteful prey by their conspicuous markings without having to taste them, and this can potentially increase both the birds' and their prey's survival rate.
The study, published in the Journal of Animal Ecology, showed that blue tits (Cyanistes caeruleus) learned best by watching their own species, whereas great tits (Parus major) learned just as well from great tits and blue tits. In addition to learning directly from trial and error, birds can decrease the likelihood of bad experiences—and potential poisoning—by watching others. Such social transmission of information about novel prey could have significant effects on prey evolution, and help explain why different bird species flock together.
"Blue tits and great tits forage together and have a similar diet, but they may differ in their hesitation to try novel food. By watching others, they can learn quickly and safely which prey are best to eat. This can reduce the time and energy they invest in trying different prey, and also help them avoid the ill effects of eating toxic prey," said Liisa Hämäläinen, formerly a Ph.D. student in the University of Cambridge's Department of Zoology (now at Macquarie University, Sydney) and first author of the report.
This is the first study to show that blue tits are just as good as great tits at learning by observing others. Previously, scientists thought great tits were better, but had only looked at learning about tasty foods. This new work shows that using social information to avoid bad outcomes is especially important in nature.
Many insect species, such as ladybirds, firebugs and tiger moths have developed conspicuous markings and bitter-tasting chemical defences to deter predators. But before birds learn to associate the markings with a disgusting taste, these species are at high risk of being eaten because they stand out.
"Conspicuous warning colours are an effective anti-predator defence for insects, but only after predators have learnt to associate the warning signal with a disgusting taste," said Hämäläinen. "Before that, these insects are an easy target for naive, uneducated predators."
Watching TV helps birds make better food choices
Credit: University of Cambridge
Blue tits and great tits forage together in the wild, so have many opportunities to learn from each other. If prey avoidance behaviour spreads quickly through predator populations, this could benefit the ongoing survival of the prey species significantly, and help drive its evolution.
The researchers showed each bird a video of another bird's response as it ate a disgusting prey item. The TV bird's disgust response to unpalatable food—including vigorous beak wiping and head shaking—provided information for the watching bird. The use of video allowed complete control of the information each bird saw.
The 'prey' shown on TV consisted of small pieces of almond flakes glued inside a white paper packet. In some of the packets, the almond flakes had been soaked in a bitter-tasting solution. Two black symbols printed on the outsides of the packets indicated palatability: tasty 'prey' had a cross symbol that blended into the background, and disgusting 'prey' had a conspicuous square symbol.
The TV-watching birds were then presented with the different novel 'prey' that was either tasty or disgusting, to see if they had learned from the birds on the TV. Both  and great tits ate fewer of the disgusting 'prey' packets after watching the bird on TV showing a disgust response to those packets.
Birds, and all other predators, have to work out whether a potential food is worth eating in terms of benefits—such as nutrient content, and costs—such as the level of toxic defence chemicals. Watching others can influence their food preferences and help them learn to avoid unpalatable foods.
"In our previous work using  as a 'model predator', we found that if one bird sees another being repulsed by a new type of prey, then both  learn to avoid it in the future. By extending the research we now see that different bird species can learn from each other too," said Dr. Rose Thorogood, previously at the University of Cambridge's Department of Zoology and now at the University of Helsinki's HiLIFE Institute of Life Science in Finland, who led the research. "This increases the potential audience that can learn by watching others, and helps to drive the evolution of the  species."
Birds learn from each other's 'disgust,' enabling insects to evolve bright colors

More information: Journal of Animal Ecology (2020). DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13180
Journal information: Journal of Animal Ecology 


South American volcano showing early warning signs of 'potential collapse,' research shows


Credit: CC0 Public Domain
One of South America's most prominent volcanoes is producing early warning signals of a potential collapse, new research has shown.
Tungurahua volcano in Ecuador—known locally as "The Black Giant"—is displaying the hallmarks of flank instability, which could result in a colossal landslide.
New research, led by Dr. James Hickey from the Camborne School of Mines, has suggested that the volcano's recent activity has led to significant rapid deformation on the western flank.
The researchers believe that the driving force causing this deformation could lead to an increased risk of the flank collapsing, causing widespread damage to the surrounding local area.
The research recommends the volcano should be closely monitored to watch for stronger early warning signs of potential collapse.
The study is published in the journal Earth & Planetary Science Letters.
Dr. Hickey, who is based at the University of Exeter's Penryn Campus, Cornwall, said: "Using  we have observed very rapid deformation of Tungurahua's west flank, which our research suggests is caused by imbalances between magma being supplied and magma being erupted".
Tungurahua volcano has a long history of flank collapse, and has also been frequently active since 1999. The activity in 1999 led to the evacuation of 25,000 people from nearby communities.
A previous eruption of Tungurahua, around 3,000 years ago, caused a prior, partial collapse of the west flank of the volcanic cone.
This collapse led to a wide-spread debris avalanche of moving rock, soil, snow and water that covered 80 square kilometres—the equivalent of more than 11,000 football fields.
Since then, the  has steadily been rebuilt over time, peaking with a steep-sided cone more than 5000 m in height.
However, the new west flank, above the site of the 3000 year old collapse, has shown repeated signs of rapid deformation while the other flanks remain stable.
The new research has shown that this deformation can be explained by shallow, temporary magma storage beneath the west flank. If this  supply is continued, the sheer volume can cause stress to accumulate within the volcanic cone—and so promote new instability of the west flank and its potential collapse.
Dr. Hickey added: "Magma supply is one of a number of factors that can cause or contribute to volcanic flank instability, so while there is a risk of possible flank collapse, the uncertainty of these natural systems also means it could remain stable. However, it's definitely one to keep an eye on in the future."

Reconstructing the Anak Krakatau flank collapse that caused the December 2018 Indonesian tsunami

More information: James Hickey et al, Rapid localized flank inflation and implications for potential slope instability at Tungurahua volcano, Ecuador, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (2020). DOI:

Syria’s Kurdish Contradiction



OCTOBER 8, 2017

A KURDISH RADICAL LEFT movement influenced by anarchism is, improbably, now receiving Pentagon support in the war for northern Syria. This movement, in fact, is now the United States’s closest partner among the indigenous forces fighting to take the Islamic State’s capital at Raqqa. This paradox is examined in a profusion of new books about the role of the Kurds in the world’s most confusing ongoing war.

Supporters of the Kurdish movement, which has established an autonomous zone in its region of Rojava, see it as a utopian experiment in direct democracy, and were inspired by its women fighters successfully resisting the ISIS invasion of its territory. The movement’s detractors, in contrast, call it an authoritarian one-party state in league with the Assad regime. There has been growing tension between the Rojava Kurds and the main Syrian opposition.

Meredith Tax in her openly enthusiastic A Road Unforeseen: Women Fight the Islamic State traces the development of Rojava’s militant feminism to roots in Turkey’s Kurdish rebel movement. This story begins with the founding of the separatist and socialist Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in 1978 and its subsequent guerilla war against the Turkish state. This set off a brutal round of CIA-backed counterinsurgency that cost thousands of lives.

Tax acknowledges that the PKK began as an authoritarian movement, and received some support from the Hafez al-Assad dictatorship in Syria. But she sees the movement growing more democratic, especially after its Fifth Congress in 1995. The PKK became part of a broader struggle for Kurdish cultural rights long denied by Turkey’s nationalist state, dramatically exemplified by Leyla Zana, the parliamentarian imprisoned in 1991 for speaking Kurdish on the chamber floor.

The decisive turn in the PKK’s transformation came after the capture of its leader Abdullah Öcalan in 1999, who rethought his politics in prison, taking inspiration from late American anarchist writer Murray Bookchin and from Mexico’s Zapatista rebel movement, which has sought local autonomy for indigenous peoples rather than secession.

Öcalan reformulated the PKK’s goal as “democratic autonomy” in the Kurdish East of Turkey rather than a separate state, and (despite the paradox that this was a diktat coming down from him as leader) a new model based on power flowing up from local councils.

This movement began to spread to the Syrian Kurds after the spontaneous 2004 uprising in the north Syrian town of Qamishli. This led to the establishment of the Rojava autonomous zone in 2012, under leadership of the Democratic Union Party (PYD), an entity in the PKK’s political orbit. Two years later, Rojava was invaded by ISIS, and Kurdish resistance at the Battle of Kobani became a global meme.

Tax portrays Turkey as conniving with ISIS forces, allowing them to use Turkish territory as a staging area for attacks on Rojava. She notes that while ISIS has launched attacks in Turkey, the most deadly of these have targeted Kurds and their leftist supporters — not the Turkish state. But she is not completely uncritical of the Rojava movement, noting its “cult of personality” around Öcalan.

In one note of hope, Tax writes that the Local Coordination Committees (LCCs), which launched Syria’s pro-democracy struggle in 2011, “resembled Rojava communes in many ways,” with their ethic of council-based democracy. But she uses the past tense, even while acknowledging that these committees continue to function amid the profusion of ruthless armed actors. She doesn’t note that they have become the de facto local government in some areas where other authority has broken down.

In the even more partisan Revolution in Rojava, co-authors Michael Knapp, Anja Flach, and Ercan Ayboga provide an in-depth look at the self-governance system in the region, but show less sensitivity about the divisions between Syria’s Kurdish movement and Arab-led opposition.

In their introductory historical overview, they refer to the past “Syrian occupation” of Rojava — actually surpassing the line of the Rojava leadership in implying that the region is not really part of Syria. They credit the Assad dynasty with “going beyond Alawite circles” to fill the state apparatus. This is a reversal of reality; after seizing power within the ruling Ba’ath Party in 1971, Hafez al-Assad began systematically favoring his own Alawite people, a practice continued by son Bashar.

They predictably show greater acumen in describing oppression of the Kurds under Arab nationalist rule in Syria, documenting how large numbers were systematically stripped of citizenship, and quoting one official who unsubtly referred to the country’s “Kurdish question” as a “malignant tumor.”

The authors detail the uprising in which the PYD took over Rojava in July 2012 — contrary to claims that the regime simply abandoned the territory. “The state had no substantial military force” when the uprising began, the authors admit, making for a quick victory. Still — it was an uprising.

The authors see little hope for unity between the PYD’s autonomous zone and Syria’s general (Arab-led) opposition. They dismiss the main opposition body, the Syrian National Council, as “dominated by the Muslim Brotherhood.”

The authors acknowledge Pentagon support for the PYD’s militia, the People’s Protection Units (YPG). But they emphasize that the United States did not recognize Rojava’s declaration of autonomy and “does not support the Rojava project politically.” They add that the United States “averts its eyes from the war crimes of the Turkish government in North Kurdistan.”

Like Tax, the authors cite the LCCs as having “ideas that are compatible with Democratic Autonomy.” But they see the Rojava zone as their ideal, concluding that its survival is “also the survival of hope for a free, communal life and a gender-liberated, ecological society.”

A similarly idealistic account is found in Struggles for Autonomy in Kurdistan, by authors Eliza Egret and Tom Anderson, who made trips to both Turkish Kurdistan (Bakur) and Rojava. Tracing the movement’s trajectory “from Marxism-Leninism to Democratic Confederalism,” they first detail the autonomous system in Bakur. Neighborhoods, towns, and provinces each have their own rebel assemblies, forming a system of parallel power. A similar council-based system now governs Rojava.

This book emphasizes the “culpability of the U.S.” in the counterinsurgency in Turkey’s east. For instance, the Turkish government used Lockheed Martin F-16 warplanes for airstrikes on the village of Roboski in December 2011 that left 34 residents dead. Other American, British, and Turkish arms companies are named as complicit in the repression.

These companies certainly deserve criticism. But the authors’ failure to express any outrage at the far greater Russian and Assad regime bombardment of civilians in Syria undermines their moral authority. They also fail to grapple with the reality that the Rojava Kurds are now being assisted by US warplanes.

Janet Biehl, the American writer and activist who translated Revolution in Rojava from the German, also translated an earlier account by the Hamburg-based TATORT Kurdistan (“Crime-scene Kurdistan”), Democratic Autonomy in North Kurdistan.

A report from a delegation to Turkey’s east, it also describes the system of dual power. It emphasizes the professed multi-ethnic character of the autonomous structures (with participation from minority peoples, such as the Qizilbash), and its repudiation of ethnic nationalism. Leaders of civil organizations are interviewed, such as the Peace Mothers, made up of mothers of Kurdish guerillas who have organized to press both sides for a political solution to the conflict. So are leaders of agricultural and light industrial collectives. One in the town of Colemerg is growing a local cucumber variety to make “resistance pickles.”

Biehl also contributes to an anthology on Rojava produced by an activist collective in New York, A Small Key Can Open a Large Door. This book also offers a discussion of the precarious role of the Kurds in the “Great Game” of geopolitics. Many foreign powers have sought to exploit the Kurds for their own aims, while “ultimately thwarting the Kurdish dream of freedom across a unified Kurdistan.”

The authors see US support for Rojava as “simply a matter of pragmatism.” They warn leftists in the West against the “essentialist” error of dismissing the Rojava movement because of this support, rather than understanding the pressures that have led the revolutionary Kurds to accept it.

The Small Key writers are clearly anarchist in their politics. They don’t try to impose their own ideology on the movement, but see the autonomous administration in Rojava as a “stateless government,” with a vision that “draws heavily from contemporary anarchist, feminist, and ecological thought.”

Janet Biehl was the longtime companion of Murray Bookchin before his death in 2006, and is today a torch-bearer for his theoretical legacy of “social ecology.” Bookchin initially styled himself as formulating a new anarchist movement for the post-industrial age, with an emphasis on community and harmony with the natural world. But late in life he repudiated anarchism for what he called “communalism” or “libertarian municipalism” (libertarian in its original sense of anti-authoritarian, definitely not its more contemporary sense of laissez-faire capitalist), which sees the municipality as the highest level at which direct self-government is possible.

The Next Revolution, a posthumously published collection of Bookchin’s late essays, makes clear that he sought to “replace the nation-state with a confederation of municipalities.” He still advanced a model in which decision-making power flows up from below. This can be seen as a kind of compromise between a pure anarchist position and a more pragmatic conception of power.

One essay explores a critical antecedent for such thinking — the anarchist uprising in Barcelona during the Spanish Civil War in 1936. Bookchin faults the anarchists for rejecting a seizure of power at a public plenum after the workers’ insurrection had crushed the fascist military rising of General Francisco Franco in the city. “If we are to learn anything from this crucial error,” Bookchin wrote, “it is that power cannot be abolished […] Power that is not in the hands of the masses must inevitably fall into the hands of their oppressors.”

The Rojava leadership clearly accepts this principle. But this opens the anarchist critique of power as inherently subject to abuse, even when delegated from below through an organic participatory process.

The idealistic views of Rojava are sharply contrasted by those of partisans of the general (Arab-led) Syrian revolution. Khiyana (Arabic for betrayal) is an anthology by supporters of the Syrian opposition movements, accusing large elements of the Western left of making a paradoxical peace with the fascistic Assad.

Such icons of the left as Julian Assange, Cynthia McKinney, Slavoj Žižek, and The Nation magazine are refreshingly lambasted for loaning propaganda cover to Assad’s regime and painting the opposition as monolithically jihadist. But some of the contributors — themselves mostly on the Marxist left — are contemptuous of both the Rojava revolution and its leftist supporters.

Sam Charles Hamad, for example, is dismissive of the perception (advanced by Tax) of Turkish state connivance with ISIS: “Daesh [ISIS] is not allied with Turkey but has declared war on it.”

Leila al-Shami has an open challenge for the leftists now mobilizing to support Rojava but remaining equivocal, uninterested, or hostile regarding the general Syrian revolution. Writing during the ISIS siege of Rojava, she asks

whether international solidarity for Kobani arises from the Kurdish ethnicity of its defenders (i.e. they’re not Sunni Arabs), from support for the political position of a party (the PYD/PKK), or from the principle that all people have the right to defend themselves from terror, whether in the form of religious or nationalist fascism, and to determine for themselves how to organize their lives and communities. If it arises from the latter principle, then the same solidarity extended to the Kurds must be extended to all revolutionary Syrians.

Conflict, Democratization, and the Kurds in the Middle East is an anthology exploring the interaction between Kurdish ethnic struggles and the pro-democracy movements in Turkey, Syria, Iraq, and Iran alike. Eva Savelsberg’s entry on Syria will make difficult reading for those enthused by the Rojava project. She portrays the PYD as an arm of the PKK that sees Turkey as the enemy and has sought “to prevent the Kurdish population from effectively participating in the revolution.” She dismisses talk of “federalism” and “democracy” as “buzzwords.” She mentions a disturbing 2013 incident at the Rojava town of Amuda, in which YPG fighters fired on protesters, leaving eight dead.

But other of Savelsberg’s claims may be dubious. She writes that Rojava’s constitution “has never been officially published” — yet it appears as an appendix in A Small Key. She concludes with arrogance: “[I]t is currently unrealistic to think that the Kurds will play any meaningful role in democratizing Syria — or even their own society.” This assessment is almost surreally at odds with the portrayals of Tax, Biehl, and fellow enthusiasts of the Rojava model.

The challenge for those wrestling with Syria’s Kurdish question is to seek a middle path between the cynicism of Savelsberg and the idealism of the Rojava experiment’s ideological proponents. It is more evident each day that the defeat of ISIS in northern Syria could only open an Arab-Kurdish ethnic war, which could also be exploited as a proxy war by regional rivals Turkey and Russia. This would not serve the interests of anyone but the jihadis, despots, and imperialists. It will take some honest grappling by the partisans on both sides in order to avoid it.

¤





Homage to Rojava: An American Fighter in ISIS Territory


JANUARY 11, 2020

ON OCTOBER 9, 2019, Turkish military forces invaded northeastern Syria, taking advantage of a recent withdrawal of US troops. The aim of the operation, according to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, was to fight terrorism. He was not referring to Islamists, but the Yekîneyên Parastina Gel (“People’s Protection Units” in Kurdish), which his government believes is a front for Kurdish separatists in Turkey.

The YPG, led by the charismatic Abdullah “Apo” Öcalan, rose to prominence in the early days of the Syrian Civil War, liberating northeastern Syria, also known as Rojava, from Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government. The “Rojava Revolution,” as some supporters describe it, quickly earned the interest of anarchists, communists, socialists, and other left-wing radicals worldwide. Volunteers from a dozen nations, including the United States, repulsed ISIS attacks on Rojava and helped free Raqqa, the Islamists’ capital in Syria.

Marcus Harnichar is a 28-year-old resident of Upstate New York who traveled to Syria in 2017 to volunteer with the YPG. I recently spoke with Harnichar about his politics, his time in Syria, and how he feels about the US withdrawal, which threatens everything that he and his comrades made sacrifices to defend.

¤

ARVIND DILAWAR: How did you first become interested in Rojava?

MARCUS HARNICHAR: I became interested in Rojava for two reasons: one family, one political. My father and uncle were in the military during the Gulf War. My uncle was infantry, my father was Navy. Because of this, I picked up study of the Gulf War. This was the initial spark for me, in terms of studying the Kurds. However, this is the much smaller of my reasons for being interested in Rojava. My main reason for wanting to go to Rojava was political. I was one of the original people at the New York City Occupy Wall Street protests. After that movement fell apart, I more or less went into political hibernation. Nothing of note was happening in the United States, and when it was happening, it was being limited by weekend warriors who were loudly moderate — think the person who comes to protests on days they have off, but insist on demanding that all marches take place on the sidewalk, so as to not bother people. During this sort of political hibernation, I started reading about the history of the struggle for Kurdistan. This lead me to “Apo” — Abdullah Öcalan — and his works fit in firmly with my political leanings. Once I had been reading Apo for a while, I started to see story after story about Rojava and the YPG. Eventually I started looking into how to join.

Why did you decide to join?

When I realized that the YPG fit so closely with my political leanings and that they wanted volunteers, I knew that if I didn’t go, I would always remember that I could have, but didn’t. I knew that I would be beating myself up, constantly saying, “I almost went,” or, “I wanted to go,” as a sort of mental defense. Fittingly enough, this is my pet peeve back home: YPG-sympathetic people who say, “I was going to go, but something came up,” or, “I almost went.” Because I couldn’t live with myself becoming one of those people, I left everything back home and went. Similar to many volunteers, I was also going through a bad relationship. It was falling apart, and the day we decided to move out of our shared apartment, I got my acceptance letter. I went to support the revolution, but there was a part of me happy to have a place to go.

How did you make arrangements for the trip?

If by “made arrangements” you mean literally, then I literally just bought a ticket to Iraq, messaged my contact that I was there, and over the course of a few days, crossed into Syria. I don’t wish to disclose specifics, as volunteers in the past have accidentally disclosed information regarding crossings and such leaks have led to arrests of people crossing. Given Turkey’s involvement in the war at this moment in time, such information could cause people to die.

If by “made arrangements” you mean what I did at home to prepare, I didn’t do much. I saved some money. I bought equipment I thought might be useful but wouldn’t have airport police questioning me — having a portable solar panel in your bag on a plane to Iraq doesn’t look as suspicious as having a sighting tool for an AK-47, for instance. My things at home, however, I just left. I hoped that some of it would be there if I came back. Bills? Unpaid. Debt? Defaulted.

How long were you in Rojava?

I went in May 2017 and came home in November 2017. My time in Rojava was mostly boring. I spent a lot of time in Shaddadi [town in northeastern Syria], which was more or less being used as a launchpoint for the future Deir ez-Zor campaign [city in eastern Syria]. There were only a handful of days I was legitimately afraid for my life, the most memorable being when my tabur — a 40-person unit — came under fire in Shaddadi. It was my first time under fire, and it was definitely a stark contrast to the boredom that makes up 99 percent of war. Eventually I went to Raqqa and left Rojava shortly after its liberation.

What kind of training, if any, did you receive?

We received very little training. The training was essentially language training and some basics on firearms. Most of the Americans were familiar with firearms already, myself included. I can’t recall the exact number, but I want to say we were allowed to fire 30 rounds or so before going to the front. So the only real training we received was language. Specifically, we studied Kurmanji Kurdish for two weeks.

Were there many other people from the United States? Of those you knew, who died there?

There were quite a few people from the United States. The list of people I met who have been killed in the war varies depending on whether you count suicide on the homefront or not. I count suicide. The list of the people I knew who died is as follows: Robert Grodt, Jake Klipsch, Ollie Hall, Jac Holmes, Kendal Breizh, Haukur Hilmarsson, Jamie Janson, Andok Cotkar, and a number of others. I won’t split them into Americans and non-Americans. They were all internationals who volunteered to fight. They all fell. I cannot split them up.

What was it like returning to “normal life” after your time in Rojava?

I can’t say that I’ve returned to normal life. I live at home as a civilian, but the war is still going on. I still have friends fighting. I still get messages from people asking me how they can volunteer. I still spend way more time than I should talking to those people, as nearly every one of them has a reason not to go when the time comes. But when I first got home, I had a hard time going to the grocery store. It sounds like a weird thing to have trouble with, but I had just gotten home from having nearly every meal made from the same six ingredients. Occasionally we would go to the store to get some stuff to supplement our meals. These stores usually had only a handful of items, and they were about the size of a small storage shed. When I got home, every aisle of every store had hundreds of different options of just one type of food. It was overwhelming. I remember getting very angry at a lady who was yelling at a clerk for being out of the particular brand and flavor of potato chip she wanted. I got angry a lot when I first got home. Life in the United States is hard to explain. I wake up every day with an easy life. Even when life is hard, it’s extremely easy. But whenever you get news from the front, you can’t help but want to be back there.

As someone who’s been to Rojava, what do you make of the United States withdrawing from the area and thereby implicitly allowing Turkey to invade?

I can’t really answer this coherently. I am furious. I’ve been stuck on this question for days. I am furious. That is literally the only thing I can say on the subject.

¤


¤

Banner image: “Kurdish YPG Fighters” by Kurdishstruggle is licensed under CC BY 2.0.
Blockades across Canada to protest pipeline
PROTESTS, OCCUPATIONS, BLOCKADE PICTURES 40 IN TOTAL 
| WED FEB 19, 2020 
Supporters of the indigenous Wet'suwet'en Nation's hereditary chiefs camp at a railway blockade as part of protests against British Columbia's Coastal GasLink pipeline, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada February 19, 2020. REUTERS/Codie McLachlan
Reuters / Wednesday, February 19, 2020Supporters of the indigenous Wet'suwet'en Nation's hereditary chiefs camp at a railway blockade as part of protests against British Columbia's Coastal GasLink pipeline, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada February 19, 2020. Protesters blocked railways and ports and held demonstrations across the country in support of the Wet'suwet'en Nation, an indigenous community whose hereditary chiefs oppose construction of British Columbia's Coastal GasLink pipeline project on their lands. REUTERS/Codie McLachlan

VICTORIA BC

ONTARIO

TORONTO

MOHAWK TERRITORIES 
Train derails in northwestern Ontario near Emo and is leaking crude oil

BY ELISHA DACEY GLOBAL NEWS February 19, 2020 11:30 am 
Crude oil is leaking near Emo, Ont. . Google Maps

A train has derailed near a northwestern Ontario town and several of the railcars are leaking crude oil.


CN Rail confirmed the derailment Wednesday morning and said Highway 602 has been blocked. The derailment happened at about 8:30 p.m. EST.

Emo is 136 km southeast of Kenora, near the Canada-U.S. border.

“At this time local emergency responders and provincial authorities are on-site and CN crews are responding,” said CN.


READ MORE: Guernsey, Sask. evacuated after CP freight train derailment

“Preliminary reports indicate that there are approximately 30 railcars derailed in various positions and there are several railcars leaking crude oil. Preliminary reports are that no product has entered a waterway.

“There is no fire and no injuries are reported. As a precaution, local responders have evacuated residents near the site. The cause of the incident is under investigation.”

WATER IS LIFE
Oneida Nation of the Thames youth leader pushes for water treatment upgrades


BY JAKE JEFFREY 980 CFPL Posted February 19, 2020  
A sign on the perimeter of Oneida Nation of the Thames
 in Ontario on Jul. 26, 2019. Declan Keogh/Ryerson University

A youth leader of the Oneida Nation of the Thames is continuing his call for upgrades to the community’s water treatment facility.

The Oneida water treatment plant was built in 1998, prior to the tragedy in Walkerton where an E. coli contamination led to the deaths of six people in 2000.

The contamination in Walkerton led to significant policy changes across the country. In Ontario, the Safe Drinking Water Act was passed in 2002, and the Federal Protocol for Centralized Drinking Water Systems in First Nations Communities in 2006.


READ MORE: Oneida Nation of the Thames tap water different than neighbouring non-Indigenous communities

“The existing water treatment plant doesn’t have the capacity to ensure safe drinking water,” says Brandon Doxtator, a youth leader at Oneida.

“People just won’t risk drinking tap water and haven’t for years.”

To date, water quality tests have indicated no contamination at Oneida, but local community leaders stress that there is a significant risk for future potential contamination as a result of their outdated facility.


They say significant upgrades need to be made to the treatment facility to bring it into line with regulatory guidelines and make the water safe for Oneida residents to drink.


READ MORE: Via Rail to resume partial service as pressure to end blockades mounts

Bottled water hasn’t been a viable option either, as the cost to Oneida to deliver bottled water to residents is $60,000 every three months.

Doxtator will be speaking on the issue Wednesday night from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the London Public Library.
No movement at rail blockade near Belleville, Ont. after weeks of halting rail traffic

BY ALEXANDRA MAZUR GLOBAL NEWS February 19, 2020 
 

Supporters bring supplies to protesters during a rail blockade in Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory, Ont. on Monday, Feb.17, 2020, in solidarity with the Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs opposed to the LNG pipeline in northern British Columbia. . THE CANADIAN PRESS / Lars Hagberg

It’s day 14 of the blockade near Belleville, Ont., that has stopped rail traffic in Ontario and much of Eastern Canada.


Cold winds whip the Mohawk, Haudenosaunee and Two Row flags mounted at the blockade, while many of the protesters take cover in tents and a camper trailer set up on the south side of the tracks at Wyman Road in Tyendinaga Township.


READ MORE: No clear end in sight as Ontario blockade nears 2 weeks of halting rail traffic

The conditions are harsh at the blockade on wintery days. The rail crossing where the protesters have set up camp since Feb. 6 has no surrounding tree to block the wind.

People have been seen taking supplies to the group, most of whom are from Mohawk Tyendinaga Territory just metres away from the crossing.

When the blockade was initially set up, an Amazon wishlist was set up for the protesters, with items like a propane water heater, military-grade winter jackets and zip ties all added Feb. 19.

This protest, the first of many of its kind, began as an act of solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs, who oppose RCMP intervention at a Coastal GasLink pipeline worksite, which is on unceded land in northern British Columbia. Despite other blockades popping up around the country, the Mohawk protest near Belleville is the longest running blockade and has affected passenger travel and shipment of goods in Ontario and eastern Canada for the last two weeks.

Starting Feb. 6, the blockade forced Via Rail to cancel travel between Toronto and Montreal, and on Feb. 13, Via announced it would be cancelling passenger rail across the country due to the Tyendinaga blockade and others like it across the country.

That same day, CN announced it had “been forced to initiate a disciplined and progressive shutdown” of its Eastern Canada operations.


READ MORE: Shutdown of Canadian National Railway lines leads to propane shortages

But this past Tuesday, Via announced they would be reintroducing rail travel between Québec City–Montréal–Ottawa on Thursday, while CN said they would have to lay off 450 workers in its Eastern Canada operations due to the cancellation of more than 400 trains in the past week.

And on Wednesday, CN said they will be upholding their shutdown of rail in Eastern Canada until the “illegal blockades” are lifted. A CN statement said the company would be opening passenger travel for Via Rail on the “short-distance corridors of Quebec-Montreal, Montreal-Ottawa, Toronto-London-Windsor, Toronto-Sarnia, and Toronto-Niagara” despite the blockade near Belleville.



AFN chief calls for peaceful resolution to Wet’suwet’en solidarity protests, rail blockades
Assembly of First Nations Chief Perry Bellegarde spoke about the ongoing nationwide protests in solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs over the building of the Coastal Gaslink, and said that the First Nation has asked for space for internal dialogue and time to formalize discussions with the Crown. He also called provincial and federal governments to support the process Wet’suwet’en members have put forward.


“By doing it progressively, we are taking the responsible approach. In the last few days, many illegal blockades occurred on our network. It is unsafe to allow passenger trains to start trips across our network when we have no control over where, when, or how an illegal blockade may occur,” the CN statement said. “It would be irresponsible to allow the travelling public to be stranded in a blockade.”

Although OPP have continuously been on-scene at the blockades in Tyendinaga, with about three cruisers always stationed several hundred metres from the rail crossing, OPP have not acted on an injunction delivered to protesters Feb. 9.

“The OPP goal continues to be preserving the peace and maintaining a safe environment for everyone,” OPP East Region spokesperson Lori Lobinowich said.

Federal Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller met with protesters for hours on Saturday near the Tyendinaga blockade, followed by a private meeting on the territory, but no movement has been made since then.
9:14 https://globalnews.ca/video/rd/6bffbdbe-50d6-11ea-ad09-0242ac110006/?jwsource=cl
Indigenous Services Minister updates progress with Mohawk First Nation Indigenous Services Minister updates progress with Mohawk First Nation

Miller said the federal government had opened a dialogue and “some modest progress” had been made, but said there was a lot of work left to be done. Miller’s sentiment to exercise caution was echoed by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Parliament Wednesday.
“There are those who would want us to act in haste;” Trudeau said, “who want us to boil this down to slogans and ignore complexities; who think using force is helpful. It is not.”
“Patience may be in short supply but that makes it more valuable than ever.

Opposition leader Andrew Scheer called Trudeau’s response the “weakest response to a national crisis in Canadian history.”

READ MORE: Quebec premier tells Trudeau to set deadline to end rail blockades

The debate in Parliament came shortly after several Indigenous chiefs, including Assembly of First Nations National Chief Perry Bellegarde and Tyendinaga Mohawk Chief Donald Maracle delivered a press conference in Ottawa to discuss the blockades.

Bellegarde said he believes the blockades would end if RCMP occupation of Wet’suwet’en land ends.
 
First Nations leaders say blockades should come to ‘peaceful end’ if guarantees met 

“What’s going on across Canada, the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs asked for help and support, and people have heard that call,” Bellegarde said. “It’s all about peace, and if you put those principles of peace, and respect and working together, things will come down, because that’s the law of peace.”

When asked what it would take for those stationed at the rail crossing in Tyendinaga to end their protest, Maracle wouldn’t answer.

“The protest was not organized by the Mohawk Council,” Maracle told reporters. Although he said he may have knowledge of the protesters’ plan, Maracle said he did not want to share those plans out of respect for the group’s rights.

—With files from Global New’s Hannah Jackson and The Canadian Press.
‘We’ve been working night and day’ to resolve blockades: Kahnawake grand chief

BY BENSON COOK GLOBAL NEWS February 19, 2020 


Demonstrations from northwestern B.C. to Montreal’s south shore are stretching well into their second week, with emotions running high as economic consequences mount. Grand Chief of the Mohawk Council of Kahnawa:ke Joe Norton sits down with Global’s Dan Spector to unpack the situation.

The grand chief of the Mohawk Council of Kahnawake warns that even after the current rail blockades across Canada come to an end, Indigenous people will still expect to be taken more seriously as both partners and owners of their traditional lands.

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In an interview with Global News Morning, Joseph Tokwiro Norton declined to “debate” remarks on Tuesday by Quebec Premier François Legault on the potential for shortages of propane and jet fuel should ongoing blockades of railway tracks in British Columbia, eastern Ontario and on Kahnawake’s territory on the south shore of Montreal continue.

Instead, Norton emphasized that both sides of the ongoing conflict seem to be working in good faith to resolve the situation.

“We’ve been working night and day to come to solutions, to come to a mind where there’s an ability to identify what needs to be done at this moment,” he said.

READ MORE: 61% of Canadians oppose Wet’suwet’en solidarity blockades, 75% back action to help Indigenous people: poll

Norton added that “once this situation is over, it doesn’t mean it’s the end of it,” saying that discussions between Indigenous peoples and governments need to continue beyond current efforts to resolve the rail blockades.

The rail blockades have sprung up as demonstrations to show solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en Nation in northwestern British Columbia, whose hereditary chiefs have clashed in recent weeks with RCMP on their traditional territory over the construction of the Coastal GasLink pipeline project.

The most high-profile solidarity protest has been on rail tracks near the Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory in eastern Ontario, which have forced the shutdown of most of the Canadian National Railway’s network east of Manitoba, as well as the suspension of most Via Rail services.

Meanwhile, demonstrations on the Canadian Pacific-owned tracks running through Kahnawake have led to the suspension of Exo’s Line 4 Candiac — a commuter train line which shuttles thousands of south shore commuters to downtown Montreal each day — for nearly two weeks.

READ MORE: Why the 1990 Oka Crisis is being evoked amid the Wet’suwet’en pipeline dispute

Norton said he was hopeful the ongoing demonstrations would not go on for too much longer.

“We care about the reaction of our neighbours,” he said.

But he also expressed frustration that some governments have continued to act as though calls to “respect the rule of law” do not apply to Indigenous laws and Indigenous territory.

“People should come to the table on a level playing field, rather than the federal and provincial governments saying, ‘We’re the law,'” he said.

“Those days should be over and done with.”

READ MORE: Trudeau says rail blockades need to be resolved but offers no clear plan

© 2020 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
Wet’suwet’en protests: House of Commons holds emergency debate over rail blockades

BY EMERALD BENSADOUN GLOBAL NEWS Updated February 19, 2020 

An emergency meeting debate is underway at the House of Commons in Ottawa over the ongoing rail blockades and Wet’suwet’en solidarity protests that have spilled out across Canada.

The debate was called by the NDP to discuss the federal government’s responsibility in addressing human rights and Indigenous sovereignty — issues at the heart of the demonstrations in Wet’suwet’en territory.

Members of Parliament took turns criticizing Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during the debate for past failed attempts at Indigenous reconciliation. NDP MP Leah Gazan accused the prime minister of “laughing” at protesters, while others called for action.


READ MORE: Indigenous land conflicts to persist unless sovereignty addressed, Wilson-Raybould says

“We have landed in a predicament that can’t be fixed by police action,” NDP MP Taylor Bachrach said during the meeting. “If we listen closely, what we can hear is that there’s too much of a gap between what the government says about Indigenous Peoples and its actions.”

Gord Johns, another NDP MP, said the Liberals should be “ashamed of themselves.”

“The cost of not taking action is killing people,” he said. “That’s why people are rising up against this country.”

Despite calls for the Liberals to remove the Royal Canadian Mounted Police from Wet’suwet’en territory, Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett stressed that the Government of Canada “cannot direct the RCMP.”


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0:46‘Human rights are not a partisan issue’: NDP MP Leah Gazan ‘Human rights are not a partisan issue’: NDP MP Leah Gazan

“The presence of the RCMP has been articulated as a problem for the hereditary chiefs and many of the members of the community. We have articulated that and we want to help remove these obstacles,” she said.

Minister of Indigenous Services Marc Miller said there was “undeniable truth” that self-determination — the right for all people to determine their own economic, social and cultural development — was a better option and urged his government to take responsibility for its regressive policies.

The Liberal MP added self-governing Indigenous peoples have “better socio-economic outcomes” because they know how to best support their people.

“We have a number of people who are fighting for their rights, they’re fighting for a peaceful solution and we need to start listening to them,” he said.

1:19 Safety of all is ‘primary importance’: Indigenous Services Minister on Wet’suwet’en solidarity protests Safety of all is ‘primary importance’: Indigenous Services Minister on Wet’suwet’en solidarity protests

But Conservative MP Cathy McLeod said the solidarity protests were less about human rights, instead calling them a “dress rehearsal” for any Trans Mountain pipeline protests in the future.

“The current government has allowed something to fester that they didn’t pay attention to,” she said. “It lays at their feet.”

Jamie Schmale, another Conservative MP, said some protesters have “no connection to this country” and accused them of pretending to advocate for the Wet’suwet’en because they weren’t Indigenous.

“A minority imposing their will on the majority is causing this problem,” Schmale said.


1:42 
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Conservative MP reads Indigenous statements allegedly in favour of Coastal GasLink pipeline Conservative MP reads Indigenous statements allegedly in favour of Coastal GasLink pipeline

Conservative MP Tim Uppal criticized the Liberal government’s approach to the situation, and said he doesn’t think enough is being done for workers feeling the economic impact of what he described as “illegal” blockades.

Earlier Tuesday, Trudeau said it was “past time” for a resolution to rail blockades that have interrupted Via Rail service, shut down railroads, and temporarily blocked borders in solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en Nation for nearly two weeks.

He offered no clear answers for what action the government would be willing to take to move things forward other than being available to speak with protesters.

https://globalnews.ca/video/rd/129db590-52b2-11ea-b12f-0242ac110003/?jwsource=cl
1:06 Conservatives say Liberals aren’t taking workers into consideration during heated debate on railway blockades Conservatives say Liberals aren’t taking workers into consideration during heated debate on railway blockades

Meanwhile, National Chief Perry Bellegarde told reporters in Ottawa that governments and industry have to give the time and space to work with the Wet’suwet’en people.

“We say we want to de-escalate and we want dialogue,” he said.

“And I say our people are taking action because they want to see action — and when they see positive action by the key players, when they see a commitment to real dialogue to address this difficult situation, people will respond in a positive way.”

Tensions between the government and the Wet’suwet’en Nation have been escalating since Dec. 31, when British Columbia’s Supreme Court granted Coastal GasLink an expanded injunction that established an exclusion zone against protesters interfering with the construction of a $6.6-billion pipeline.

READ MORE: Trudeau says rail blockades need to be resolved but offers no clear plan

If completed, the 670-kilometre pipeline is expected to carry natural gas from northeastern B.C. to a massive export plant being built near Kitimat, passing through the nation’s unceded territory.

The project has the support of 20 elected band council members — but not by the territory’s hereditary chiefs, who have maintained a blockade at several points along the proposed route.

Protests in support of the Wet’suwet’en Nation shut down the CN rail network in eastern Canada, suspended most Via Rail passenger service, and temporarily blocked traffic on streets and bridges and at ports in multiple cities for several days, forcing Via Rail to shut down nationwide train service and CN Rail to close its Eastern Canadian network.


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3:54 Scheer slams Trudeau on rail crisis: All talk and no action Scheer slams Trudeau on rail crisis: All talk and no action

Limited service was restored by Via Rail on Tuesday along the Ottawa-Montreal-Quebec City corridor, which is not being blockaded. The train service company said it expects to resume partial passenger service Thursday between Ottawa and Quebec City, including a stop in Montreal.

In a statement to Global News Tuesday, CN Rail said it would be laying off approximately 450 of its Eastern Canadian operational staff, including employees working at Autoport in Eastern Passage, Moncton, Charny and Montreal.

“With over 400 trains cancelled during the last week and new protests that emerged at strategic locations on our mainline, we have decided that a progressive shutdown of our Eastern Canadian operations is the responsible approach to take for the safety of our employees and the protesters,” they said.

They added the layoffs were “regrettable,” as it was for reasons beyond their control, but said they were “well set up for recovery” once the blockades end.

This is a developing news story. More information will be added as it becomes available.

— With files from Global News’ Amanda Connolly and The Canadian Press. 

© 2020 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.