Winnipeg protesters rally at MP's office in solidarity with northern B.C. pipeline opponents - Action News
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Winnipeg protesters rally at MP's office in solidarity with northern B.C. pipeline opponents

Dozens of protesters gathered outside the officeof amember of Parliament in Winnipeg Tuesday, opposing a pipeline in northern B.C.

Indigenous Youth for Wet'suwet'en rally against the Coastal GasLink pipeline, want response from MP Dan Vandal

Dozens of protesters gathered at the officeof aMember of Parliament Dan Vandal in Winnipeg Tuesday to voice their opposition to the Coastal GasLink natural gas pipeline project in B.C. (Sam Samson/CBC)

Dozens of protesters gathered at the Winnipegofficeof amember of Parliament Tuesday to voice their opposition toa pipeline in northern B.C.

The rally against the multibillion-dollar Coastal GasLinknatural gas pipeline project was organized by a group calling themselves the Indigenous Youth for Wet'suwet'en. Protesters gathered Tuesday morning at the office of MP Dan Vandal, who is also minister of Northern Affairs, where they rallied outside and also sat peacefully inside, sayingthey are not leaving until they get a response from the MP.

The peaceful protest "is an action of solidarity to show that the world is watchingthe actions being taken in B.C.," said Emily Amos, a Prairie Cree and Coastal Salishprotester.

The fact the pipeline is several provinces away is irrelevant, she said.

Emily Amos says Tuesday's peaceful protest was a sign of solidarity. (Gary Solilak/CBC)

"IfWet'suwet'en territory becomes ruined by the construction that goes on out there, it could eventually travel to us, and then our entire land will be ruined."

In a tweet sent Thursday, Vandal said he had "a productive conversation" with one of the protesters, and said he planned to follow up later this week.

The conflict between theWet'suwet'en and Coastal GasLink first came to a head over a year ago, but tensions recently started rising again.

The project has received approval from the province of B.C., and 20 First Nations band councils have signed agreements in support of the pipeline. But Wet'suwet'en hereditary leadership says band councils do not have authority over land outside of the reserve boundaries.

Earlier this week, B.C. premier John Horganappointed formerMP Nathan Cullen to act as an intermediary between the chiefs, the province, RCMP, Coastal GasLink and others.

Tuesday'sprotest in Winnipeghappened to fallon the same day the Federal Court of Appeal dismissed a 2018 appeal by Indigenous groups that challenged expanding the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion project, whichwill carry nearly a million barrels of Alberta oil per dayto the B.C. coast.

That appeal argued that the government consultations with locals were a failure, and that government needed to do a better job of informing and working with First Nations whose land will be affected.

The appeal court, however,ruled that the federal government carried out "reasonable" and "meaningful" consultations with Indigenous peoples affected by the project's construction before approving the pipeline for a second time.

With files from Sam Samson and John Paul Tasker