B.C. residents in Wet’suwet’en territory have right to police presence: Blair
OTTAWA — As tensions at rail blockades in Quebec and Ontario escalated Wednesday, Public Safety Minister Bill Blair appeared to dismiss the notion that police will move completely out of the vast Wet’suwet’en territory in British Columbia.
The hereditary chiefs of the First Nation at the heart of countrywide rail and road disruptions have said they will not meet with federal and provincial officials to discuss their opposition to the Coastal GasLink natural gas pipeline until the RCMP leave their traditional territory entirely and the company ceases work in the area.
Blair said the RCMP, which is under contract to police provincially in B.C., has removed its officers from an access road to a work site for the pipeline and stationed them in the nearby town of Houston, about 300 kilometres west of Prince George.
But when it comes to the hereditary chiefs’ demand that the RCMP leave the 22,000 square kilometres of Wet’suwet’en traditional territory — an area about twice the size of Cape Breton Island — Blair said the people who live there have a right to be protected by police.