Protestors Rail against Oil Pipelines
July 16th, 2010
Protestors rail against oil pipelines
(from the IEN website)
Crowds in Smithers, BC watched as more than 100 protesters marched Friday
afternoon from the Ministry of Forestry building on Tatlow Road and
continued marching down Main Street to the CN Building on Railway
Avenue.

Their topic of contention: Pipelines.
"We don't need no - CN Rail pipe!" the protestors shouted. "Hey! Enbridge! Leave our lands alone!"

First Nations from as far as Ontario, North Dakota and Alberta joined
members of the Unist'ot'en of the Wet'suwet'en, who organized the march
to protest the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline.
Protesters also voiced their opposition to a natural gas project by
Kinder Morgan, a North American transportation company that plans to
transport natural gas from Alberta to BC using CN Rail lines.

"We're standing up for our salmon, our wildlife, and our wild areas,"
spokesperson Sue Deranger said. Deranger is a member of the Chipewyan
Nation in Athabasca, Alberta, where the oil sands are. "My nation has
been destroyed by the tar sands," she said. "We didn't know. But you
know what's coming, so let's stop the pipelines!"
Deranger said that oil sands development has spread cancer throughout
her community. A nine-year-old boy died from brain cancer last month, a
death she attributes to the oil sands.
Friday's protest was the first in a series of planned protests, Freda
Huson, spokesperson for the Unist'ot'en people in the C'ilhts'ekhyu
Clan, said. The Unist'ot'en Chiefs have never ceded rights to that
land, and they will continue to fight, she said.
The protests are a good way to show support for all surrounding nations, Huson added.
Wayne Thom, who watched the protests march down Main Street, said he fully supported the protest.
"We don't need that pipeline," he said. "It will destroy the region."