People at Unist’ot’en are condemning the violations of Wet’suwet’en law, Canadian law, and of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) committed by the RCMP over the weekend on Gidimt’en Clan territory against camps located at 27, 39, and 44 kilometers on the Morice Forest Service Road.
These violations were committed by the RCMP on behalf of Coastal GasLink’s (CGL) interlocutory injunction and the existence of an ever-expanding and undefined exclusion zone.
Coastal GasLink’s injunction does not prohibit travel on the Morice Forest Service Road nor does it prohibit residence at the Unist’ot’en village or any other Wet’suwet’en home sites on their land.
Unist’ot’en is demanding that the RCMP does not evict the people at the Unist’ot’en Healing Centre.
The RCMP has no jurisdiction to enter the Healing Centre without Free, Prior, and Informed Consent. Even under colonial law, the RCMP cannot enter or search the Healing Centre without a warrant.
International public support is called for to ensure the safety of the Healing Centre. People living and receiving treatment there are not in violation of CGL’s injunction, nor is the Healing Centre itself in violation of the injunction.
The Healing Centre exists to support the self-determination and healing of first nation people and is unrelated to CGL’s work and the injunction.
Unist’ot’en says it is outraged over the use of excessive force by the RCMP, including the unnecessary use of heavily armed tactical teams deployed by helicopters to surround Gidimt’en camp at 44 km, use of snipers, and deployment of K9 units.
In January 2019, RCMP were authorized to use genocidal lethal force, arrest children and grandparents, and apprehend Wet’suwet’en children in response to peaceful protests.
Throughout the enforcement of CGL’s injunction, media and legal observers were illegally corralled and threatened with detention and arrest for doing their jobs. Freedom of the press is protected under Canadian law but journalists were prevented from documenting the RCMP militarized raids on Gidimt’en territories.
The RCMP attempted to evict residents from Chief Woos’s cabin. The RCMP and Coastal GasLink also partially dismantled Gidimt’en camp infrastructure and property.
This property belongs to the Gidimt’en Clan and the RCMP has no legal authority to destroy it.
On February 8, the exclusion zone was illegally expanded from the 27 KM to the 4 KM mark, and now encompasses the majority of Gidimt’en territory.
As a result, eleven people including legal observers were illegally arrested from the 27 km cabin.
The exclusion zone has been created by the RCMP to force Wet’suwet’en land defenders off their land.
Memebers say it is a colonial and criminalizing tool to illegally and arbitrarily extend RCMP authority onto their lands.
The massive exclusion zone, completely under RCMP authoritarian discretion, falls outside the injunction area. Chiefs and Wet’suwet’en people are illegally being denied access to their own territories.
They are urging Canada to adhere to the UN Committee for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination directives and to halt the Coastal Gaslink project, seek Free, Prior, and Informed Consent from the Wet’suwet’en Hereditary Chiefs, withdraw RCMP from our territories and ensure that no lethal weapons or force be used to forcibly evict Wet’suwet’en people from their lands.