Indigenous
Canadian fracking protesters refuse to back down
OTTAWA,
Canada — Anti-fracking demonstrators set tires ablaze to block a
New Brunswick highway Monday in a fiery response to a judge’s
decision to extend an injunction limiting their protests against a
Texas-based shale gas exploration company.
2
December, 2013
In
a courtroom in Fredericton, the capital of New Brunswick, Judge
Paulette Garnett ruled to continue through Dec. 17 the injunction
obtained by SWN Resources Canada against a coalition of protesters
led by Mi’kmaq indigenous people from the Elsipogtog First Nation.
The
injunction, which SWN obtained on Nov. 22, is designed to keep
protesters from interfering with SWN’s seismic testing work. It
requires that demonstrators remain at least 250 yards in front of or
behind contractors and their vehicles and 20 yards to the side.
The
Mi’kmaq have argued that SWN is conducting exploration work on land
that they never ceded to the crown when they signed treaties with the
British in the 18th century.
New
Brunswick’s government granted SWN licenses to explore for shale
gas in 2010 in exchange for investment in the province worth
approximately CA$47 million (about US$44 million).
The
protesters fear that exploration will inevitably lead to gas
extraction by means of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, in which
water and chemicals are injected into shale rock to release gas
deposits trapped inside. Opponents say fracking can contaminate the
environment, especially water.
SWN
has been trying since mid-November to complete the final 10 days of
work it says are left in its exploration season. The company has
claimed in court documents supporting the injunction application that
each day of lost work costs about $54,000 and that vandalism by
protesters has resulted in damage to more than 1,000 geophones —
pieces of equipment used for seismic testing in conjunction with
specialized trucks.
Daily
confrontations
But
the injunction has not deterred the anti-fracking alliance of
indigenous people and members of New Brunswick’s Acadian and
anglophone communities, a grouping that has consolidated since
Elsipogtog residents began trying to stop SWN’s exploration work
last May. Over the past week there have been daily confrontations
with police, as protesters — who prefer to be known as protectors
of the land and water — have persisted in their efforts to slow the
seismic-testing operation.
“This
isn’t just a native issue,” Edgar Clair of Elsipogtog First
Nation told Al Jazeera from the site of the blockade on Route 11.
“But the natives want the world to know that this is Mi’kmaq
territory, and they won’t back down, and they won’t abide by this
injunction.”
Earlier
Monday afternoon protesters blocked Route 11 — the latest front
line in this conflict over shale gas exploration — after the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police, who decide how and when to enforce the
injunction, arrested several people on or near the highway. People at
the site said that there were more than 100 RCMP officers in the
area, that some were armed with rubber pellet guns often used for
crowd control and that at least one K-9 unit was on hand.
As
night descended, there were reports that police in riot gear were
near the blockade. The RCMP could not immediately be reached for
comment.
“Our
people are tired, and this is a response to the justice system,”
said an Elsipogtog community member who was at the site and asked to
go by the name Jane Doe 372, for fear of being targeted by police.
The moniker is a reference to the injunction that names five
individuals and a John and Jane Doe. “We’re tired of not being
taken seriously and that the treaties we agreed to are not being
taken seriously.”
Dancing
around burning tires
As
the sun set and round dances were held around the burning tires at
the blockade, drumming and singing could be heard in live video
streams broadcast from the site.
SWN’s
original application for an injunction was supported by the
provincial government. In an affidavit accompanying the filing, Bill
Breckenridge of the Department of Energy and Mines maintained that
the company “is engaged in lawful exploration activity along New
Brunswick Route 11, a designated highway under the administration and
control of the province.”
This
is not the first injunction that members of the Mi’kmaq-led
coalition of fracking protesters have defied.
At
the beginning of October, SWN Resources Canada obtained an injunction
against occupants of an encampment of protesters blocking a lot where
the company had parked seismic-testing trucks. The camp effectively
trapped the equipment.
On
Oct. 17, a day before the injunction was due to expire, the RCMP
enforced it. Dozens of officers entered the camp with automatic
rifles, dogs and beanbag guns. As the day progressed, RCMP
pepper-sprayed elders and women from Elsipogtog. Six RCMP vehicles
were torched, and some 40 people were arrested.
Nonnative
support growing
Across
Canada on Monday, solidarity actions unfolded in support of the
Elsipogtog. Demonstrators set up a temporary blockade at Vancouver’s
port and rallied in the western city of Victoria. In Toronto there
were banner drops, and a group of protesters photo-bombed an
interview by Canada’s Prime Minister Stephen Harper at a local news
station. A small rally was held on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, the
nation’s capital. And in Montreal, a solidarity blockade stopped
traffic at an intersection until an angry motorist turned violent and
ran his car into a protester.
“The
call has been heard across Canada,” said Dave Goodswimmer, who
traveled to New Brunswick with a small caravan of supporters from
British Columbia more than a month ago. “We’re not going
anywhere,” he told Al Jazeera by phone, adding that more people
were expected to join the blockade as the night progressed.
“Nonnative
support is growing and growing,” Clair said. “It’s becoming a
bigger issue than a single corporation coming to bully us around.
It’s becoming a small revolution. Canada’s going to change after
this.”
Elsipogtog
support rallies sprout across Canada
Demonstrations
across the country took place Monday in support of the anti -fracking
movement in New Brunswick.
For
video GO HERE
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