The Province

B.C. chief says First Nations didn’t give up rights for pipeline to be built

- AMY SMART

SMITHERS — No elected band council or Crown authority has jurisdicti­on over the land, a Wet’suwet’en hereditary chief told a crowd of supporters and First Nations leaders gathered in the territory that has become a battlegrou­nd for Indigenous sovereignt­y.

Chief Na’Moks said agreements signed by pipeline builder Coastal GasLink are illegitima­te and the support shown by those gathered, and by many people around the world, proves the Wet’suwet’en hereditary leaders do not stand alone.

“Our rights to those lands have never been extinguish­ed,” Na’Moks said during the gathering on Wednesday.

First Nations leaders from across B.C. travelled to Smithers for the rally to show their support for the hereditary chiefs, after RCMP enforced a court injunction last week allowing the natural gas pipeline company access into the territory.

Following the rally, chiefs and supporters marched along part of Highway 16, which cuts through the Wet’suwet’en territory.

Chiefs and elected council members from several B.C. First Nations, including Haida, Gitxsan, Babine Lake and Lax Kwa’laams, stepped up to share their stories.

They talked during the gathering of resistance against industry and frustratio­n with the applicatio­n of Canadian laws.

Wayne Christian of the Secwepemc nation told the crowd that “legislativ­e genocide” had been waged against Indigenous Peoples for generation­s, referring to colonial and Canadian laws he said have been used to take away land and deny rights.

He said reconcilia­tion cannot occur “at the end of a gun.”

Several leaders spoke about conflicts they have had with industry and cases where Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs have shown them support that they now want to return.

Harvey Humchitt, a hereditary chief with the Heiltsuk First Nation in Bella Bella, where a tug ran aground spilling diesel and lubricants into the waters, said it takes only one incident to cause devastatio­n.

Murray Smith of the Lax Kw’alaams First Nation said Na’Moks supported members of his nation who were trying to protect eel grass from industry at Lelu Island, and again when they appeared before the United Nations to appeal for their authority to be recognized.

“You are in charge of your land, make no mistake about it. We are in charge of our land. And at times, we need to rely on each other for support,” he said.

 ?? — POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? CHIEF NA’MOKS
— POSTMEDIA NEWS CHIEF NA’MOKS

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