It's Time to Shut it Down

20/10/20
Author: 
Unist'ot'en Solidarity Brigade       
Photo of RCMP violently arresting Sepwecemc land defender blocakding Trans Mountain Drilling under the Thompson River Friday
From coast to coast right now Indigenous people are being attacked by state and settler forces for defending their inherent rights. 

In Mi'kma'ki the RCMP, and the colonial government is standing by and watching while racist settler fisherman commit hate crimes to try to stop indigenous people from harvesting from their territory. 

None of this can stand.

The time for action is now! 
Critical video update from Wet'suwet'en Checkpoint:

Please watch and share this video

"It’s time... #SDC2020

SDC2020

FROM COAST TO COAST

INDIGENOUS NATIONS ARE UNDER ATTACK

The Mi’kmaq are fighting for their inherent & treaty rights to provide for their families

THE COLONIAL GOVERNMENT HAS BEEN SILENT

Calls of justice for Joyce rang out through the country

The Anishinabe have called for a moratorium on Moose hunting

The Haudenosaunee are fighting to stop a development in their territories

The Secwepemc are fighting to preserve their unceded lands and waterways

The Wet’suwet’en are fighting to protect the headwaters

The Gitxsan are fighting against a corporation (CN) lawsuit for occupying unceded lands

POLICE FORCES ARE STANDING BY AND ALLOWING HATE CRIMES TO OCCUR…

THE RCMP & OPP ARE ACTIVELY CRIMINALIZING PEOPLE


WE SAW THE POWER OF SHUT DOWN CANADA IN THE PAST…

THE GOVERNMENT AND THEIR FORCES ARE DONE WITH WORKING TOWARDS RECONCILIATION…

IT’S TIME TO STOP TALKING, AND START TAKING ACTION

IT’S TIME TO
SHUT
IT
DOWN

#SHUTDOWNCANADA2020 #ReconciliationIsDead #IdleNoMore #MMIWG2S #MMIWG
*Edit: The Haudenosaunee, inclusive of the Mohawks*

Joint Statement by Secwepemc & Gidimt’en Land Defenders

 
Update from We'tsuwet'en Checkpoint on the horrific state sanctioned hate crimes Mi'ma'ki are enduring in their struggle

"This is what’s currently going on in Mi’kma’ki. If you’re not angry, you’re not paying attention.

>From what we understand, this is the same building (Inshore Fisheries Ltd) that the commercial fishermen staged their “protest” at the other night. The same place where they poured paint thinner over crates of lobster. The same place that the rcmp stood by and did nothing.

The government refuses to address the fact that there are hate crimes being committed... they refuse to step in and say “the Mi’kmaq have inherent rights to fish - affirmed by treaty rights and the Marshall decision”.

The complacency of the government and rcmp, and their allowance for this violence to continue to occur makes a very clear statement: they are complicit, and only emboldening the racist behaviour & violence.

There was a great saying on a thread earlier: Ally is a verb, not a noun. So, if you consider yourself an ally, it’s time to step up, speak up, and shut down this ongoing violence & infringement of rights. If you wouldn’t stand there and allow for someone to burn a building, it’s your responsibility to condemn these actions.

It’s not enough to be non-racist, we have to actively be anti-racist... and this is about race.

#AllEyesOnMikmaki #Mikmaq #IndigenousSolidarity #ShutDownCanada

Photo of RCMP violently arresting Sepwecemc land defender blocakding Trans Mountain Drilling under the Thompson River Friday

Joint Statement by Secwepemc and Gidemt'en Land Defenders

October 16, 2020

Pipeline companies threaten violence to communities, salmon and wildlife with drilling under sacred headwaters.

(Unceded Yintah / Secwepemcúĺecw Territories): Coastal Gaslink pipeline in Wet’suwet’en territory and Trans Mountain Pipeline in Secwepemc territory are both currently preparing to drill under our clear rivers, from which we have drawn sustenance since time immemorial. In the past few days we have seen Indigenous women interrupted during ceremonies in both territories, and arrests and incarcerations in Secwepemc territories, for enacting their sacred responsibilities. 

The Trans Mountain Pipeline weaves through over 900 rivers and creeks, threatening both Secwepemcetkwe (Thompson) and Fraser River systems. The North Thompson is connected to the Adams River, a vital spawning habitat for chinook, coho, and pink salmon, and home to one of the most important sockeye runs in the world. Any leakage would immediately threaten the pacific salmon who spawn in the Secwepemcetkwe (Thompson) and Fraser River basins.

In an open letter to the Prime Minister dated November 26, 2016, our late Secwepemc leader Arthur Manuel wrote to Trudeau:

“The salmon and the rivers they inhabit have taken care of our people for centuries and we are obligated as Secwepemc people to protect the Thompson River system for future generations.”

In this the Secwepemc stand in solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en people, who have been fighting to protect Wedzin Kwa (Morice River) from pipeline incursions for over a decade. Wetʼsuwetʼen means “People of the lower drainage” and Wet’suwet’en people's lives are inseparable from the life of the Wedzin Kwa river, which we have protected for thousands of years, and which has in turn fed us and governed us through our hereditary leaders and knowledge-keepers.

Sleydo’ Molly Wickham, spokesperson of the Gidimt'en Checkpoint, states:

At this time our rivers, the lifeblood of our nations, are facing drills, toxins and invaders. Indigenous people are standing up to state violence, big industry and corporate greed for the future of all of humanity--of all life on our yintah. We stand with our Secwepemc relatives in their struggle and ask all Indigenous peoples and our allies to stand up for the salmon, the clean drinking water, the animals and our future generations. We will not let them kill us. We will always be here.

Over the last two decades we have witnessed the dramatic decline of our salmon as a result of toxic extractive and urban development on our territory, as well as fish farms, invasive species, and climate change. These pipeline expansions pose the most direct risk yet.

The drilling alone threatens not only salmon spawning habitat but the balance of the entire ecosystem and food chain they rely upon. The sockeye are tenacious, fighting their way thousands of kilometres upstream from the Pacific Ocean to reach their spawning beds in Secwepemc territory. Wedzin Kwa joins the Skeena and runs through the canyons out to the Pacific Ocean. We cannot risk putting any more obstacles in the salmons’ way.

Our traditional land users and stewards—those who exercise our right to hunt, fish, gather, and practice our culture—are the ones who truly understand the potential impacts of the pipeline. It is these members of our nations who will feel the effects of the pipeline on our rights and our food sovereignty most acutely. It is these members who have authority over our lands the government of Canada has failed most.

When we protect our rivers from invading industries, and insist on our rights to fish and hunt on our territories, we are criminalized, harassed and jailed. In Secwepemc territory, there were 5 arrests yesterday and 3 indigenous land defenders were sentenced to 28 days in Canadian jail.

By refusing to seek the free prior and informed consent of our people, and instead opting to sign deals and agreements with a few of our federal Indian bands, the government of Canada has undermined the authority of the proper rights and title holders of Secwepemcúl’ecw and the Wet’suwet’en yintah.

 
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We can't let this stand! 
-Unist'ot'en Solidarity Brigade