Today a number of First Nations — including all four of the Pull Together nations — filed lawsuits to judicially review the federal government's recent re-approval of the Trans Mountain pipeline and tankers project.
After hearing from leadership of Tsleil-Waututh, Coldwater, Squamish and Secwepemc Nations, we’re feeling energized and optimistic about the likelihood that we'll have the same outcome as last time — which was stopping this project dead in its tracks and quashing the TMX approvals.
According to Eugene Kung, staff lawyer for West Coast Environmental Law, “unfortunately our federal government continues its pursuit of the legal floor or the minimum when it comes to consultation. What happens when you aim for the floor and you miss what you're aiming for is you get quashed in court. That’s what we saw last time.
Government claims that they've learned their lesson, that they're doing better but the reality is: you cannot have reconciliation by running roughshod over Indigenous rights, by forcing a pipeline without the consent of Indigenous Peoples.”
It’s inspiring and hopeful that Nations are willing to carry on a long fight against a project that threatens their very survial as peoples. We heard from leadership how grateful they are that there is a movement of people standing beside them, ready to support their strategic legal actions. Their cases are strong, but they need us to pitch in.
Chief Ignace goes on to appeal to ordinary citizens not to let this injustice stand. “I want to say to ordinary people: our fight is not with you, it’s with the leaders that are making these kinds of decision. You as citizens have a duty to see that your governments do the right thing by us."
In solidarity,
RAVEN + the Pull Together team
p.s. Please click the link below at 6 pm PDT to join the mass organizing call and find out how you can organize in your community, your business and your workplace to stand with First Nations against TMX: https://zoom.us/j/959039089