Saturday, February 15, 2020

University of Lethbridge expert shares insight into Wet’suwet’en pipeline dispute

BY TOM ROULSTON GLOBAL NEWS
Posted February 14, 2020 5:22 pm


WATCH ABOVE: https://globalnews.ca/video/rd/aface800-4a20-11ea-92f7-0242ac110003/
An assistant professor of Indigenous governance and business management shared his insights Friday on a pipeline dispute in northern B.C. that’s ignited protests and blockades across Canada. Tom Roulston has more.

An expert in Indigenous governance and business management shared his insights Friday into the ongoing pipeline dispute on the Wet’suet’en Nation in northern B.C.

The Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs are protesting the construction of the Coastal GasLink pipeline through their land, and in recent days, rallies and railway blockades have taken place across the country in a show of solidarity.

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“Their power comes from hereditary stories that have been passed down from the beginning of time,” said Don McIntyre, an assistant professor at the University of Lethbridge.

“And those stories are stories of how their clan, their family, must interact with the land.”

But not everyone on the B.C. nation is against the pipeline project, in fact, its tribal council supports it.

McIntyre said this type of divide is not unique to the Wet’suwet’en territory.

“Communities are saying, ‘I need a new car,’ and the same community is saying, ‘But I need to ensure that I continue to be who I am as an Indigenous person.'”

READ MORE: Average Wet’suwet’en people caught in pipeline dispute crossfire, says wing chief

According to McIntyre, not enough questions are being asked about who within Indigenous communities should be consulted on projects like the Coastal GasLink pipeline.

“When you’re cherry-picking who you’re going to consult with, that’s where you run into this problem,” he said.

As for the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs, McIntyre cautioned against anyone who would dismiss their view.

“To discount that voice is, I think, somewhat foolhardy if we are a country that actually identifies ourselves by how we associate ourselves with our land,” McIntyre said.

“At some point, the consultation has to be at that level — it has to be a consultation of Indigenous voices.”
Wet'suwet'en supporters in Edmonton take to the streets, one taken into custody

JEFF LABINE  Updated: February 14, 2020

 

 Approximately 60 protesters rally in solidarity with Wet'suwet'en Hereditary Chiefs, as they march along Jasper Avenue near 108 Street, in Edmonton Friday Feb. 14, 2020. Approximately 20 Edmonton Police Service members were on hand during the protest. Photo by David Bloom

Supporters of Wet’suwet’en’s fight to stop a gas pipeline from going to the British Columbia coast took to the streets in Edmonton, where police say one person was taken into custody.

About 60 protesters of the proposed Coastal GasLink pipeline marched along Jasper Avenue at 109 Street Friday afternoon with signs in hand. Edmonton city police responded by monitoring the situation and asking motorists to avoid the area if possible. About 20 officers were called to the scene.

Police confirmed three people were taken into custody but only one was related to the protest. Police said a protester was taken into custody for allegedly blocking traffic but released some time later with no charges. Two other people were also taken into custody in the area but police said this was unrelated to the protest.

Police said in a news release that Canadians have a right to gather peacefully but there are limitations on peacefull assembly under the Criminal Code.

Coastal GasLink has signed agreements with all 20 elected band councils along the pipeline route. However, Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs assert title to a vast 22,000-square-kilometre area and say band councils only have authority over reserve lands. The pipeline is meant to pump natural gas from northeastern B.C. to an export facility being built in Kitimat.

The company has promised $1 billion in benefits to First Nations along the 670-km route.

CN Rail shut down its eastern Canadian network Thursday and Via Rail cancelled most passenger trains after protesters blockaded tracks crossing through Mohawk territory in Ontario.

On Friday, protesters lifted a blockade from a commuter rail route in Vancouver as Indigenous leaders planned to meet with federal and provincial politicians. A protest blocking the CN Rail line near Belleville, Ont., remained in place.
CTV News
Protesters rally in support of Wet'suwet'en in downtown Edmonton
A group of protesters gathered in downtown to show their support for the Wet'suwet'en First Nation in their fight against the Coastal GasLink pipeline Friday ...



1:09m

Wet'suwet'en supporters flood 109 Street

Protesters rally in support of Wet'suwet'en in downtown Edmonton

CTV News Edmonton Staff Friday, February 14, 2020 3
EDMONTON -- A group of about 50 gathered in downtown Edmonton Friday afternoon to show their support for the Wet'suwet'en First Nation's fight against the Coastal GasLink pipeline.The protest started in the area of Jasper Avenue and 109 Street just after 3 p.m. Protesters circled the intersection with megaphones and signs for about half an hour.One protester told CTV News Edmonton he wanted to block traffic, but police officers told people to stay on the crosswalks and sidewalks.

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stakeEdmonton Police Service said officers did take one person into custody after they appeared to attempt to block traffic. They have since been released. No charges were laid.EPS said the majority of the group remained clear of the roadway, as advised by police, and that several officers walked with them for a period.Two others were arrested in relation to a separate unrelated event, police said.The group dispersed just before 4 p.m.

PROTESTS BECOMING AN 'ECONOMIC CRISIS': KENNEY

Similar protests have taken place across the country, and rail blockades have prompted CN Rail to halt rail service in eastern Canada, and Via Rail to cancel passenger trains nationwide.

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said Friday the blockades by "angry fringe groups" are quickly having an effect across Canada.

"This is not just a regional issue and it's not just isolated. This has become a national economic crisis."

Kenney noted there are domino effects from the shutdown that are affecting people, including rail workers and agriculture producers.

“It means that our farmers here in the West are going to have a harder time getting their products to market,” said Kenney.

“And guess what? Our farmers - they don't have defined benefit pensions. They don't have job security. They don't get paid unless that grain gets loaded onto the trains. Trains that are now being shut down.

FARMERS IN WESTERN CANADA ARE MILLIONAIRES IN HOCK TO THE BANKS
THE ALBERTA GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIZES AGRIBUSINESS IN ALBERTA FARMERS
 ARE THE BIGGEST RECIPIENTS OF STATE WELFARE IN ALBERTA

“I think Canadians are losing patience with this. I know Indigenous people are.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said the disruptions by Indigenous groups and supporters must be resolved through dialogue, rather than ordering police.

The blockades started with a protest by Indigenous groups in B.C., where the Coastal GasLink natural gas pipeline would pass through First Nations territory.

With files from The Canadian Press

Supporters of Wet’suwet’en block trains at Macmillan Yard in Vaughan
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Canada's continued land appropriation and its violent enforcement thereof makes a mockery of the claimed political ideal of reconciliation.

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Rail corridor remains closed due to Wet'suwet'en solidarity protests | Power & Politics


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From Twitter









Andrew Kurjataverified_user


akurjata


Port of Prince Rupert talking in terms of "weeks" in terms of getting back ok track after five-day blockade of CN Rail line in support of Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs https://t.co/le4hnNW0Ip


Twitter2020-02-14 7:34 p.m.









Richard Zussmanverified_user


richardzussman


The BC government has agreed to meet with local First Nation leadership about the CGL pipeline as part of a resolution to take down a CN Rail blockade. @scottfraserndp will go on behalf of B.C. Looks like @MarcMillerVM will go on behalf of the Feds. #Wetsuweten #bcpoli https://t.co/reJXTvfgPK


Twitter2020-02-13 9:54 a.m.









ChantelleBellrichardverified_user


pieglue


VIA Rail cancels trains nationwide, CN shuts down Eastern Canadian network as protests continue in support of the #Wetsuweten hereditary chiefs #cdnpoli #bcpoli https://t.co/IUNit4ckOw


Twitter2020-02-13 3:27 p.m.









Doug Donaldsonverified_user


DonaldsonDoug


A few supporters have asked to hear more from me re: sharing what I can about what I'm doing from inside in Victoria to help Wet’suwet’en-BC gov. relationships. Below is one example of that in regards to the CN rail blockage by Gitxsan in New Hazelton. https://t.co/Nwfexe4o7M


Twitter2020-02-13 8:28 p.m.














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Haiti: 15 children die in fire at orphanage run by US Christian group

  • Two burned to death and 13 died in hospital due to asphyxiation
  • Facility was run by US Christian group
 A staff worker at the orphanage stands amid the charred children’s home on the outskirts of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Friday. Photograph: Dieu Nalio Chery/AP
Fifteen children have died after a fire swept through an orphanage in Haiti run by a US Christian group, triggering renewed controversy over the proliferation of non-registered orphanages in the poorest nation in the Americas.
Two children burned to death when fire broke out at the orphanage of the Church of Bible Understanding on the outskirts of Port-au-Prince on Thursday night. Thirteen others died in hospital due to asphyxiation.
Rescue workers arrived at the scene on motorcycles and did not have bottled oxygen or the ambulances needed to transport the children to the hospital, said Jean-Francois Robenty, a civil protection official.
“They could have been saved,” he said. “We didn’t have the equipment to save their lives.”
The Scranton, Pennsylvania-based Church of Bible Understanding says on its website it started its first orphanage in Haiti nearly 40 years ago. It says its primary goal is “to spread the gospel to any and all who will receive it”.
Arielle Jeanty Villedrouin, the director of the Institute for Social Welfare, said the orphanage, which housed about 60 children, did not have state authorization to operate. Just 35 of 754 orphanages in Haiti are officially authorized, with a further 100 in the process of getting a license.
The government has closed about 160 institutions over the last five years, she said, and has barred any more from opening.
According to the Associated Press, the group lost accreditation for its homes after a series of inspections beginning in November 2012. Haitian inspectors faulted the group for overcrowding, unsanitary conditions and not having enough adequately trained staff.
The Church of Bible Understanding operates two homes for nearly 200 children in Haiti as part of a “Christian training program”, according to its most recent not-for-profit organization filing. It has operated in the country since 1977.
It identifies the homes as orphanages but it is common in Haiti for impoverished parents to place children in residential care centers.
Four in five of the about 30,000 children in Haiti’s orphanages have living parents who gave them up because they were too impoverished to look after them, according to the government.
“We take in children who are in desperate situations,” the organization says in its tax filing for 2017, the most recent year available. “Many of them were very close to death when we took them in.” The not-for-profit reported revenue of $6.6m and expenses of $2.2m for the year.

Apocalyptic moment locust invasion turns sky dark as 'worst infestation in decades' hits

APOCALYPTIC footage has shown the terrifying moment drivers in Kenya were descended upon by billions of locusts sparking further panic among east African countries.


Dozens of African nations including, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia and Uganda have been invaded by enormous swarms of desert locusts. This has raised fears on surrounding food security as the pests have been known to decimate crops in short periods of time. The video footage shows the shock and surprise as the skies darken due to the locusts covering the sky.

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The infestation in Kenya is being considered the worst in 70 years whereas Somalia and Ethiopia are experiencing the worst outbreak in 25 years.


The UN has warned against the locusts and insisted the risk to crop production and food security will put millions of lives at risk.

Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator Mark Lowcock spoke to African ambassadors during a briefing at UN Headquarters on the severity of the issue earlier this week.

He said: “In this region, where there is so much suffering and so much vulnerability and fragility, we simply cannot afford another major shock.

Biblical apocalyptic locusts invasion causes panic in ‘worst infestation in decades' (Image: Getty )

The UN has warned against the locusts and insisted the risk to crop production and food security will put millions of lives at risk. (Image: Getty )


“That is why we need to act quickly.

“We do have a chance to nip this problem in the bud, but that’s not what we’re doing at the moment.

“We’re running out of time.”

The horde of estimated 360 billion insects were spotted crossing into the Karamoja border region in the northeast of Uganda by border officials who sounded an alarm.


Locusts devastated food supplies across the Horn of Africa after the United Nations’s Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) warned of an emerging humanitarian crisis last month (Image: n/a )

The United Nations’s Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) warned of an emerging humanitarian crisis last month.
Somalia has already declared a state of emergency due to the damaging loss of vital crops which the insects have munched their way through.
The United Nations has insisted they have protocols to help contain and monitor the problem across the countries.


'Massive' 20-foot-long great white shark off Florida coast leaves scuba divers in awe
Ed Killer

Treasure Coast Tuesday, during a trip on Walker's Dive Charters out of Riviera Beach, Florida, a group of scuba divers

encountered a once-in-a-lifetime experience – a great white shark.

The encounter took place near a spot known as the Breakers Reef, a mile offshore of the Breakers Hotel on Palm Beach.

During the dive, a great white shark about 20 feet long slowly drifted by near the bottom, enabling divers to get photos and brief video.

On average, female great white sharks measure 15-16 feet in length, and males grow to 11-13 feet, according to the Smithsonian.

There was pretty good visibility during the dive, so it was easy for divers to get photos and video without spooking the shark. The shark had no visible satellite tag affixed to its dorsal fin, so it was not tagged by OCEARCH, an organization that gathers ocean data.



Great white shark Ironbound pings off Florida:Could be making its way to Gulf of Mexico

Great white sharks are observed by divers once or twice a year off the coast of South Florida.

Many on the trip were thrilled by the encounter.

"Today all of my dreams came true and I got to hang out on the reef with a Great White Shark!!! Best Day ever!!" Margaux Frankel wrote on her Facebook page.

"Only need two words to describe diving West Palm with Walker's Dive Charters today: Great White!" Jim Cocci wrote on his Facebook page.

Last year, a group of spearfishermen saw one in 80 feet of water off Jupiter. OCEARCH-tagged sharks ping off the coast of Florida each winter as they make their way into the Gulf of Mexico.


'They were bouncing off the walls'

Capt. Bill Walker of Walker's Dive Charters said the great white shark sighting was the first for one of his charters in 27 years of operation. There were 11 divers on the trip, and all were able to get a glimpse of the big shark.

"When they surfaced, they were bouncing off the walls," Walker said. He said the divers were in 55 feet of water. It was the second dive of the day. The first was offshore of Mar-a-Lago.

Walker received a radio call from another boat, which had seen the shark. When his divers surfaced, Walker piloted the dive boat to the location.

Cocci, 76, was the first on the transom. He didn't want another diver to spook the shark, if it was even there.

"I dropped in, and of course, no shark," said Cocci who has been a certified diver for 52 years. "The group was drifting north with the current. The visibility was not that good, it was kind of hazy."

Another diver alerted Cocci to the appearance of the big shark.

"I looked down, and it was about 10 feet in front of him," Cocci said. "It appeared out of the dark blue haze like an apparition – and it was massive."

He was told by an expert the shark was probably a pregnant female. It was the first time Cocci dived with a great white shark.

"The shark had no interest in anybody," Cocci said. "She came back two more times, and that enabled me to get the video. I had to swim my butt off to try to keep up with her."

Cocci is retired but posts his videos and photos on his website at Jcocci.com.

Walker said this time of year, his charters generally see bull sharks, lemon sharks and nurse sharks, along with an occasional hammerhead. Mutton snapper, large stingrays, spotted eagle rays and moray eels are also common.

What to do if you spot a white shark

A team from the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries Shark Research Program is working to identify the shark. Over the years, the program has developed a database to identify white sharks based on distinctive markings, scars and coloration.

If anyone encounters a great white shark and has good quality photos and video, the program can be contacted at MassSharks@gmail.com or by tagging these social media handles:
Twitter: @MA_Sharks
Facebook: MA Sharks
Instagram: MA_Sharks

USA TODAY