Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Vancouver Island Fish Farm Occupiers Served with Injunction

Tensions Rise between RCMP and First Nations Against fish farms

by Musgamagw Dzawada'enuxw - Cleansing Our Waters


17 October 2017

RCMP, Marine Harvest, and Department of Fisheries and Oceans today arrived on site to where Members from six First Nations of the Kwakwaka'wakw have been occupying fish farms, in their territorial waters for nearly two months near Alert Bay, B.C.

Yesterday, the peaceful occupiers, were served with notices of injunction applications to be heard in court on Wednesday.

Sources have reported significantly increased numbers of RCMP, Marine Harvest employees and Fisheries and Oceans employees in nearby Port McNeill headed to Port Elizabeth with boats and water equipment.

RCMP have been escorting the Norwegian vessel, Viktoria Viking, contracted by Marine Harvest to refill salmon pens with juvenile stocks, against local First Nation consent. The company is restocking, despite that most of the farm tenures and/or licenses expire before the fish mature.

The escalation in tactical teams, equipment and police numbers deeply concern First Nation members who have been asserting their rights to consent and consultation. Communities oppose the open net salmon farms' effects on wild salmon including spread of disease, sea lice and other environmental concerns.

The police have no jurisdiction to remove the occupiers, and are supporting the illegal restocking of destructive open net salmon pens in their territory, instead of defending rights and title, and right to wild salmon assert community members.

The police escalation follows a gathering of Namgis, Musgamagw Dzawada'enuxw, Mamalilikulla hereditary leadership and community members this weekend. David Suzuki, UBCIC Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, Elected Chief Bob Chamberlain, and Elected Chief Rebecca David representative from the BC AFN, were present to show support for those occupying the farms, messages indicated over 90 First Nations are in support of the collective nations’ demands for removal and ongoing occupations.

Last week, Premier John Horgan met with approximately forty Kwakwaka'wakw leaders - elected and hereditary alike,and supporting community members - First Nations and non First Nations, alike. of the community who demanded the fish farms be removed.


For Immediate Release
October 17, 2017

Media Contact:
Ernest Alfred Email: alertbayalfred@gmail.com

Carla Voyageur Email: gwayee_jane@yahoo.ca

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