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The B.C. Supreme Court will decide by Nov. 17 whether to grant Kinder Morgan an injunction to stop anti-pipeline protesters from interfering with survey work on Burnaby Mountain.
The pipeline company also launched a multimillion civil suit against the five pipeline opponents, claiming, assault, trespassing and intimidation, and protesters are anxiously waiting for the Associate Chief Justice Austin Cullen's decision.
"It's in the back of your mind, and you have one eye on that all the time," said Stephen Collis, an SFU English professor and one of five protesters named in the suit. "I'm pretty exhausted, emotionally, as well as everything else."
Collis characterized Kinder Morgan's suit as a frivolous attempt to shut down protesters. Fellow protester Lynne Quarmby agreed.
"It's obvious that their intent is to intimidate and silence us, and I was determined to be strong and to not be silenced and to continue to speak out," she told the NOW. "But I think it's also important to acknowledge it's been an incredibly difficult time. It has definitely thrown our lives into chaos."
Quarmby, Collis, Alan Dutton of BROKE and two other protesters have been singled out as the ringleaders, leading the charge to block Kinder Morgan's survey work in the conservation area, but Quarmby says there are many people on the mountain, and there's no hierarchical structure in place.
Even if Kinder Morgan secures and injunction, people are not going to easily walk away from the mountain, Quarmby added. - See more at: http://www.burnabynow.com/news/protesters-await-court-decision-on-injunc...