Wet’suwe’ten Blockade Against Logging

March 27, 2010
For near­ly five months now, a Wet’suwe’ten fam­i­ly in cen­tral BC has main­tained a road block­ade with­in their House ter­ri­to­ry.

The Cana­di­an log­ging com­pa­ny Can­for was grant­ed rights to log in the ter­ri­to­ry by the Provin­cial gov­ern­ment in August 2009. How­ev­er, they did so with­out con­sult­ing or gain­ing the con­sent of the Wet’suwe’ten Nation.

March 27, 2010
For near­ly five months now, a Wet’suwe’ten fam­i­ly in cen­tral BC has main­tained a road block­ade with­in their House ter­ri­to­ry.

The Cana­di­an log­ging com­pa­ny Can­for was grant­ed rights to log in the ter­ri­to­ry by the Provin­cial gov­ern­ment in August 2009. How­ev­er, they did so with­out con­sult­ing or gain­ing the con­sent of the Wet’suwe’ten Nation.

Can­for began their log­ging effort soon after they were grant­ed their new rights–putting in dan­ger the last remain­ing por­tion of the Wet’suwe’ten’s ter­ri­to­ry that has not already been torn apart by log­ging.

The com­pa­ny reg­u­lar­ly entered their ter­ri­to­ry for rough­ly three months; until, one day in mid-Novem­ber, they were greet­ed with a fam­i­ly road­block on Red­top road.

Can­for has not been able to re-enter the ter­ri­to­ry since then; but they have tried dozens of times, even returnin­ing as often as once a day.

The Cana­di­an com­pa­ny also filed for an injunc­tion against the Wet’suwe’ten fam­i­ly for restrict­ing access to their own ter­ri­to­ry. A counter injunc­tion is being sought against the com­pa­ny.

This is all tak­ing place in spite of the Province’s con­sti­tu­tion­al oblig­a­tion to con­sult the Wet’suwe’ten Nation, as well as a 2001 agree­ment between the Wet’suwe’ten and the BC Min­istry of Forests which states that no log­ging may take place in the con­ces­sion area with­out pri­or con­sul­ta­tion.

The next court date con­cern­ing the Wet’suwe’ten’s intact for­est and Canfor’s (sec­ondary) log­ging rights to it, is expect­ed to take place in June 2010.

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