OPP arrest multiple protesters at Tyendinaga Mohawk rail blockade

Authored by globalnews.ca and submitted by PistolSixThirteen

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Ontario Provincial Police arrested “several” people Monday at a railway blockade in Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory, which was set up nearly three weeks ago in solidarity with anti-pipeline protests in northern British Columbia.

The police action came hours after a midnight deadline calling for the protesters to clear the area expired. OPP has not said whether anyone faces charges, or given a specific number of arrests, but acknowledged that the situation is “ongoing.”

Despite the day’s events, the lines of communication between the government and Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs remain open, federal Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller said.

“It means now that we’re working even harder… We remain committed to a peaceful resolution,” he told reporters before Question Period Monday. “We’re not only fighting days of suspicion and mistrust but decades and centuries.”

All five hereditary chiefs were expected to meet in northern B.C. Monday to plan their next steps. It’s believed talks with the RCMP could resume on Thursday, at the earliest.

Miller said he hopes the results of that meeting are positive.

4:06 OPP arrest multiple protesters at Tyendinaga Mohawk rail blockade OPP arrest multiple protesters at Tyendinaga Mohawk rail blockade

The blockade near Belleville, Ont. was established on Feb. 6 in a show of support for the hereditary chiefs of the Wet’suwet’en Nation, who oppose the construction of a massive natural gas pipeline on their territory in B.C.

Three blockades have also sprang up in British Columbia: one on a rail line near New Hazelton, one on a rail line in Maple Ridge targeting the West Coast Express commuter train and another blocking the Port of Vancouver. A Wet’suwet’en solidarity protest also erupted in Victoria, B.C..

Monday evening also saw protesters establishing a new rail blockade in Hamilton, Ont. — just hours after the blockade on Mohawk territory was dismantled.

A post on the Wet’suwet’en Strong: Hamilton in Solidarity Facebook group said the blockade began at 5 p.m. ET “in response to the OPP raid on Tyendinaga.”

Further protests also unfolded in Mohawk communities in Quebec Monday — all in response to the police action in Ontario. Protesters in solidarity with Wet’suwet’en obstructed roads and blockaded railways in the Kanesatake and Kahnawake communities.

The Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs say the pipeline cannot proceed without their consent, despite the fact Coastal GasLink has received support from a number of other elected band councils along the 670-kilometre pipeline.

Protesters on the Ontario blockade were given until just before 12 a.m. ET to leave the tracks. The blockade, which has choked railway traffic across a significant swath of Ontario and Quebec, was still in place in the early hours of Monday morning.

Sources in the Mohawk community told Global News protesters had no intention of leaving, and that they were prepared for police arrival.

A stream of OPP vehicles descended on the site shortly after 8 a.m. Monday. A number of protesters were led away by officers, some in handcuffs.

#BREAKING | Several police officers and vehicles have made their to the protest camp in Tyendinaga, it appears OPP are going to try and end this blockade once and for all. #Wetsuweten #Mohawk pic.twitter.com/ge3tTpROvF — Kamil Karamali (@KamilKaramali) February 24, 2020

OPP said in a statement that enforcement of the court-ordered injunction “may include the arrest of those who choose not to comply.”

“Use of force remains a last resort,” the provincial force said, adding that no one was injured.

“The OPP will continue to follow and engage in communication while enforcing the injunction. Open communication, a reasoned and tempered approach, and proper use of police discretion guides the OPP’s response to this and other major events.”

Ontario Provincial Police move in on protesters in Belleville, Ont. on February 24, 2020. (Morganne Campbell/Twitter)

While the situation was tense, both sides appeared to engage in a discussion for some time, though it’s unclear what about.

Many of those arrested were placed in a police van. They could be heard banging on the walls and singing songs in unison from inside.

At another demonstration nearby, protesters set fire to tires, causing thick plumes of black smoke to drift high into the sky.

Tire fire at Tyendinaga Camp 2 is heating up. Lots of smoke. pic.twitter.com/ItAplyX0f1 — David Akin 🇨🇦 (@davidakin) February 24, 2020

In a live stream posted on Facebook by local Indigenous media outlet Real Peoples Media, reportedly taken about 15 minutes after OPP arrived, dozens of officers stand face-to-face with protesters.

“Look at all these guns against us. How many years? How many years have you had these guns against us?” one protester asks police in the video. The officers do not respond.

“This is Mohawk territory you’re on. You guys are trespassing.”

1:53 Protesters disrupt traffic on Highway 132 in support of Tyendinaga Mohawk Protesters disrupt traffic on Highway 132 in support of Tyendinaga Mohawk

The move to dismantle the Ontario blockade comes after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau demanded injunctions be enforced Friday.

“Every attempt at dialogue has been made but discussions have not been productive. We cannot have dialogue when only one party is coming to the table,” he said during a press conference Friday. “The fact remains: the barricades must now come down. The injunctions must be obeyed and the law must be upheld.”

He convened his cabinet’s incident-response group on the matter shortly after police moved in on Monday morning. The group discussed solutions to the blockades, ways to restore rail service across Canada and the ongoing economic impacts of the demonstrations.

The government says it is committed to finding a “peaceful and lasting resolution” that respectfully ends the blockades while also upholding the “rule of law.”

Opposition Leader Andrew Scheer accused Trudeau of “doing nothing” to quell the dispute.

Scheer said he believes supporting reconciliation involves upholding the rule of law. He pointed to the more than 20 First Nations communities along the pipeline route that have signed their support for the project.

“If we want to be serious about First Nations, we have to listen to them when they say yes, and we can’t give certain people veto of these types of projects,” he said before Question Period.

“They cannot break the law. They cannot cause other people to lose their jobs and suffer economic hardship because they don’t like a decision being made.”

2:41 Teck Resources withdraws application for Frontier oil sands mine Teck Resources withdraws application for Frontier oil sands mine

As police began the work to dismantle the barricade, more protesters flocked to Parliament Hill to show their support for the Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs.

The group of youth climate activists initially planned to protest against Teck Resources’ Frontier oilsands project, but following the news that broke overnight that the company has pulled back their application for the project, the activists switched their focus to the Wet’suwet’en First Nation. Hundreds of protesters took to Ottawa’s downtown streets, many of them chanting slogans like “U-G-L-Y, CGL, you cheat and lie,” referring to the company at the heart of the natural gas pipeline, Coastal GasLink.

In a statement early Monday morning, the Mohawk community in Tyendinaga said they had no intention of leaving until three “pending issues” are seen to:

the RCMP leaves the Wet’suwet’en territory in B.C.

a follow-up meeting is had with Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller

a concern for the safety of families “if any use of force” by police were to occur

“There has always and continues to be, a willingness from the Tyendinaga Mohawks to discuss an exit strategy of the CN Rail Main Line,” the statement reads.

“We are currently waiting on confirmation from the Wet’suwet’en Hereditary Chiefs that the RCMP have left Wet’suwet’en territory, as they have just arrived home from visiting our lands.”

OPP on site of a blockade set up on a rail line in eastern Ontario in solidarity with the hereditary chiefs of Wetsuweten Nation on Feb. 24, 2020.

The chiefs visited supporters this week in Tyendinaga and Kahnawake, just south of Montreal, where they told crowds that their conditions for talks to resume had not been met.

According to RCMP, a mobile unit on the Wet’suwet’en territory in B.C. has been temporarily closed. The spokesperson told Global News on Saturday that discussions were underway with the RCMP deputy commissioner about its future in the area.

–With files from The Canadian Press and Global News’ David Lao, Nick Westoll and Simon Little

CamelCicada on February 24th, 2020 at 15:35 UTC »

The amount of non-Canadians on Twitter who have no idea what's actually going on calling Canada a fascist country is absurd. These people are nuts.

ecotersol on February 24th, 2020 at 14:18 UTC »

Every time this topic comes up I usually see someone mention that the Wet'suwet'en already had their elections and voted on this matter and the majority decided to go through with the pipelines. Is this true?

Edit: So apparently the topic is quite complex (duh) and there is a divide among the Wet'suwet'en and how their politics work (hereditary chiefs vs subchiefs and other stuff). Some Wet'suwet'en people claim the hereditary chiefs are ignoring certain clans who do want the pipelines built

Edit: Elected band council (for pipeline) and hereditary chiefs (against)

“(The band council has) done their due diligence and they want to be part of this economic initiative, create jobs for their people, be part of the economy, and they balanced the environment and the economy,” National Chief Perry Bellegarde of the Assembly of First Nations told CTV’s Power Play earlier this week.

In the ancestral territory lands of the Wet'suwet'en peoples, it’s the hereditary chiefs and their clans and their big houses that have the jurisdiction,” Bellegarde added. “That’s the piece that’s missing, so when Coastal GasLink and governments come in, they didn’t bring the Wet'suwet'en nation and the proper people in place to deal with their ancestral lands.”

Honestly I think there's too much noise around this issue and the Wet'suwet'en need to figure their shit out together (without Coastal Gaslink or environmental activists/protesters getting in their way). These two different systems aren't doing anyone any favours.

TexasToast842 on February 24th, 2020 at 13:59 UTC »

They've threatened to shut down GO lines in Toronto.

https://twitter.com/MercedesGlobal/status/1231823180110716929?s=19