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Pacific Booker Minerals Inc V.BKM

Alternate Symbol(s):  PBMLF

Pacific Booker Minerals Inc. is a Canadian natural resource exploration company. The Company’s principal business activity is the exploration of its mineral property interests, with its principal mineral property interests located in Canada. The Company is in the advanced stage of exploration of the Morrison deposit, a porphyry copper/gold/molybdenum ore body, located approximately 35 kilometers (km) north of Granisle, BC and situated within the Babine Lake Porphyry Copper Belt. It has a 100% interest in certain mineral claims located contiguous to the Morrison claims. The Company is proposing an open-pit mining and milling operation for the production of copper/gold/silver concentrate and molybdenum concentrate. It is located within 29 km of two former producing copper mines, Bell and Granisle. The Company is in the design stage of the exploration and evaluation of the Morrison property.


TSXV:BKM - Post by User

Post by uptowndog1on Apr 02, 2024 2:10pm
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Post# 35965697

Frustrated with government, Gitxsan Hereditary Chiefs

Frustrated with government, Gitxsan Hereditary Chiefs
Frustrated with government, Gitxsan Hereditary Chiefs wavering on support for B.C. pipeline
 
On a bitterly cold morning in early March, Gitxsan Simgiigyat (Hereditary Chiefs) stood outside the provincial  Supreme Court building in Smithers, B.C., their regalia fending off the  icy air.
 
“Our way of life has been subverted by the  Canadian government,” Simogyat (Chief) Molaxan Norman Moore told a  gathering of supporters and observers, his voice reverberating off the  drab concrete building.
 
Inside, proceedings continued for a Hereditary Chief of the neighbouring Wet’suwet’en Nation, who was found guilty of criminal contempt  in February. The Simgiigyat organized the demonstration to show their  support for Din ze’ (Hereditary Chief) Dsta’hyl, who was arrested in  October 2021 after decommissioning Coastal GasLink machinery at pipeline construction sites on his Likhts’amisyu Clan territory. 
“They’re treating us as wards of the  government. They’re treating us as minions,” Molaxan told The Narwhal in  an interview. “We say things and it just goes past and they’re just  sitting there, nonchalant. They’re brushing us off. The government is  brushing us off.”
 
The Gitxsan and Wet’suwet’en have alliances that span thousands of years. But the Gitxsan Hereditary  Chiefs’ public disapproval of government conduct is noteworthy, since it  marks a departure from their previous approach to the fossil fuel  industry.
 
While Wet’suwet’en Hereditary Chiefs have been more outspoken about their opposition to new pipelines, several Gitxsan Chiefs, including some who are now speaking out, signed agreements with the province in support of the Prince Rupert Gas Transmission project  in 2014. If built, that pipeline would link fossil fuel sources in the  northeast to Pacific shipping routes, carrying liquefied natural gas  (LNG) across Gitxsan and numerous other First Nations’ territories. The  agreements included funding and were paired with assurances of  environmental protection and respect for Indigenous Rights.
 
The Gitxsan Simgiigyat still support the  pipeline project on paper, but their vocal criticisms point to  frustration with government and industry officials, who they feel are  failing to deliver on the agreements they made nearly a decade ago.  Their increasingly ambivalent position toward the project reflects  multiple deepening tensions between First Nations, industry and  government.
 
Since the Gitxsan pledged their support  for the Prince Rupert Gas Transmission project, successive B.C.  governments and industry proponents have described the LNG sector as a  path to redressing historic wrongs, including addressing ongoing  economic inequity. At the annual BC Natural Resources Forum in January,  Indigenous-led projects like Cedar LNG  and Ksi Lisims (which would receive gas from the Prince Rupert  pipeline) were touted as bellwethers of how major projects should get  built in B.C. and shining examples of what’s been dubbed “economic  reconciliation.”
 
Some advocates for the LNG industry say  these projects are win-win, providing a boost to the economy while  sharing a stake with First Nations partners, who can influence how  projects are built. A few industry advocates have even accused environmental groups  of paternalistic colonialism for standing in the way of such  partnerships by opposing First Nations that support fossil fuel  development.
 
Murray Rankin, B.C. Minister of Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation, told The Narwhal the B.C. government is  working with the Gitxsan Hereditary Chiefs.
 
“Recently, I met with Gitxsan Huwilp  Government leadership, where we had good discussions on a number of  interests,” Rankin wrote in an email, adding the provincial and federal  governments are working with the Hereditary Chiefs on implementation of  Gitxsan Rights and Title in treaty negotiations.
 
Simogyat Gwiiyeehl Brian Williams told The  Narwhal the meeting with Rankin isn’t enough, noting his nation has yet  to achieve genuine progress despite 40 years of ongoing negotiations  with government.
 
If built, Prince Rupert Gas Transmission  would ship natural gas to Ksi Lisims, a proposed liquefaction and  export facility on Nisga’a territory. The B.C. government approved the  pipeline in 2014 and construction has to be substantially underway by  the end of the year, otherwise the project’s environmental assessment  certificate will expire. 
 
On March 14, Calgary-based TC Energy  announced it was selling the pipeline to the Nisga’a Nation and its  partner, Western LNG, a Texas-based fossil fuel company. TC Energy is  the company responsible for the Coastal GasLink pipeline  and is involved in legal disputes with Wet’suwet’en land defenders and  their supporters. While the company is technically divesting ownership  of the pipeline, the proposed Prince Rupert project would tap into its  subsidiary,  NOVA Gas Transmission, which is owned and operated by TC Energy.
 
The B.C. Environmental Assessment Office told The Narwhal the project’s initial five-year certificate was  extended in 2019, and First Nations will be consulted as part of  determining whether it qualifies for a “substantially started”  designation. 
 
Simogyat Luutkudziiwus Gordon Sebastian said discussions are underway between the Chiefs. 
 
“We will definitely talk about it amongst ourselves, and if there’s good reason, we will probably just stop it,” he told Dogwood BC,  an advocacy group that promotes environmental protections and  Indigenous Rights. “It’s not a matter of getting out of the agreement or  not, it’s just a matter of saying no pipeline.”
 
But the courts make it difficult for First Nations to say no, according to a 2019 report by the Yellowhead Institute, a research organization that focuses on  Indigenous Rights. Their analysis reviewed a list of court injunctions  related to resource projects and found 76 per cent of those filed by  corporations against First Nations were granted, while 81 per cent of  injunctions filed against corporations by First Nations were denied. In  other words, the law tends to side with corporate interests.
 
“Government always favours big business over … us good little Indians,” Molaxan added.
 
Gwiiyeehl said this is why he would like  to see a judicial review of decisions by the Supreme Court of B.C. and  for cabinet ministers to meet with the Simgiigyat to address the  pattern. He is particularly concerned by how the trajectory of legal  orders issued in favour of corporations inevitably leads to RCMP  enforcement and “reconciliation at the end of a gun.”
 
“One little trigger, little twitch, and you’re gone,” he said in an interview. “That’s how we feel.” 
 
Meanwhile, more than $50 million in  federal and provincial funding has been allocated to police enforcement  of court injunctions related to Indigenous-led resistance to Coastal  GasLink, on Wet’suwet’en and Gitxsan  lands and across the country. Dsta’hyl’s 2021 arrest and subsequent  conviction was directly related to an injunction issued to Coastal  GasLink in 2019.
 
Molaxan told The Narwhal one of the main  outcomes of the decision was a directive from the courts to First  Nations, imploring them to “negotiate, not litigate.” The phrase was  chanted by the Chiefs and their supporters at the Smithers rally in  March, pointing out the hypocrisy as Crown prosecutors inside the courts  set a sentencing date for the Wet’suwet’en Chief. 
 
“It’s a two-way street,” he said. “The  government … they’re the ones that are litigating. I thought that the  law applies to them too.”
 
Governments, First Nations and courts have  been navigating these types of issues and conflicts for decades as they  grapple with the relationship between Indigenous Rights and economic  development, according to a former public servant who once served as the  federal government’s top bureaucrat.
 
“I think the consistent thing that First  Nations have sought when it comes to resource development is a say in  the decision making, about whether development goes forward and how it  goes forward,” Michael Wernick, a former clerk of the Privy Council from 2016 to 2019, said.
 
Wernick, who also served as deputy  minister of Indian and Northern Affairs from 2006 to 2014, said  Indigenous leaders can leverage unresolved Rights and Title issues as a  way to hold the government accountable on any decisions with larger  implications for the economy and the health of local communities.
 
While he declined to comment specifically on the matters unfolding on Gitxsan territory, he said sovereign nations can point to provincial and federal commitments to Indigenous Rights legislation, for example. 
 
“So it ends up being kind of a negotiation  about, you know, ‘We won’t take you to court, we won’t block you, we  won’t slow you down — if we get a benefits agreement or resource royalty  sharing, or some kind of piece of the piece of it that we find  acceptable,’ ” he said. 
 
“I don’t want that to sound in any way  negative,” he emphasized. “That’s a perfectly reasonable thing to do and  it happens with non-Indigenous communities, too.”
 
He added the timing of the Gitxsan Chiefs speaking out is interesting, given the upcoming B.C. election.
 
“My guess would be that if you’re Premier  Eby … you do not want this to flare up,” he said. “You would rather have  some calm — at least until after the provincial election is over.”
 
Gwiiyeehl and Molaxan are no strangers to  working with politicians and civil servants on thorny issues. Molaxan  worked closely on the 1997 landmark Delgamuukw-Gisday’wa court case,  in which the Supreme Court of Canada affirmed the Gitxsan and  Wet’suwet’en nations had never given up Rights and Title to the combined  55,000 square kilometres of land, called laxyip and yintah,  respectively. Both have been involved in negotiations with the  provincial and federal governments for decades, including discussions  around forestry, mining and pipeline development on the laxyip.
 
Rankin, the B.C. cabinet minister, said he  is taking the lead on discussions with the Chiefs “to reconcile our  respective laws and jurisdictions, in a way that responds to the unique  context and priorities of the Gitxsan Nation, as set out by the  Delgamuukw-Gisday’wa Supreme Court case.” 
 
The 2015 agreement between the Simgiigyat and the provincial government was negotiated by John Rustad, former  minister of Indigenous relations and current leader of the BC  Conservatives. The document protects the provincial government from  legal action, including “any court actions or proceedings that directly  or indirectly challenge any government actions in relation to the  natural gas pipeline project on the basis that the province has failed  to consult or accommodate Gitxsan” or on the basis that the province has  infringed any of the Gitxsan Nation’s constitutionally protected  rights.
 
According to a 2020 article  by Yellowhead Institute co-founder Shiri Pasternak that analyzed a  draft contract between a Wet’suwet’en band council and Coastal GasLink,  some benefits agreements between First Nations and industry proponents  also include clauses that require First Nations leaders to “take all  reasonable actions to persuade … members to not take any action, legal  or otherwise, including any media or social media campaign, that may  impede, hinder, frustrate, delay, stop or interfere with the project’s  contractors, any authorizations or any approval processes.”
 
“We are forbidden from protesting and  going in front and stopping it,” Molaxan said, referring to the  restrictions in the agreements. “Not only that, but we cannot talk about  it because they’re saying you’re going to incite people into riots.”
 
Opposition to the pipeline could set the  stage for future conflict, especially if the courts and RCMP intervene.  Tensions between Gitxsan and the federal police force have been building  for years.
 
In 2021, following a now-infamous RCMP raid  in which numerous Wet’suwet’en and Gitxsan land defenders and their  supporters were arrested, Gitxsan community members set up a brief  blockade on the CN Rail line and were met with an “overwhelming use of  force,” according to Kolin Sutherland-Wilson, a Gitxsan member of Wilp  (house group) Git’luuhl’um’hetxwit and current elected chief of the  Kispiox band council.
 
“We are not here to get hurt, we are not  here to get killed,” he told The Narwhal at the time. “We are here  simply to hold the people at the top of the Canadian government  accountable, because they have a responsibility to uphold Crown  relations with sovereign Indigenous Peoples.”
 
Gwiiyeehl linked RCMP actions to industry, alleging the force’s controversial Community-Industry Response Group  (now called the Critical Response Unit, referred to as CRU-BC) is  beholden to protect the likes of pipeline projects. 
 
“The RCMP is a product of Canada so now  you’ve got industry employing Canada to get rid of the Indians at the  point of a gun,” he said. 
 
Staff Sergeant Kris Clark, with the RCMP’s  media relations team, told The Narwhal the Mounties acknowledge and  respect the concerns of the Simgiigyat but pushed back against the idea  the unit is linked directly to industry.
 
“While I cannot speak to their specific  allegation, there is a common misconception that CRU-BC only serves  industry, but in reality, the community and its safety is at the core of  its mandate,” Clark wrote in an email.
 
Clark added the RCMP is aware the Gitxsan  Hereditary Chiefs told the police force to ensure members of the unit  stay off Gitxsan lands.
 
“While the BC RCMP will do everything  possible to respect the ban, we have lawful obligations and  responsibilities to enforce the Supreme Court injunction and maintain  public safety, which must take priority,” he wrote. “We acknowledge that  due to the nature of the conflict, with the goal of the protesters to  stop continued work, protests, physical conflict, civil litigation or  other related tactics are almost inevitable. Ultimately, our response  will depend on protest actions as CRU-BC intervention is only required  when protests are no longer peaceful, lawful or safe.”
 
Wernick said all levels of government will be paying attention to how this unfolds.
 
“That is always something the federal  government will keep an eye on,” he said. “There is a very easily  activated network of sympathy protests and even some of the blockades …  so if something flares up in one community, it’s not really  containable.”
 
In an effort to find ways to work with the  RCMP, Gwiiyeehl and Molaxan signed an agreement with the federal police  force in December 2022. The agreement detailed a community safety plan  to “deal with burgeoning safety crises between the RCMP and members of  the Gitxsan people on their lands,” according to the Simgiigyat. Warren  Brown, B.C.’s Chief Superintendent at the time, signed on behalf of the  RCMP.
 
Since the signing, however, talks have  stalled. Gwiiyeehl said Brown was transferred and they have had no  follow up communication with his replacement or other members of the  force.
 
“We had one meeting and we’re supposed to  have another meeting, just to do dry runs to figure out ways that we can  negotiate appropriately and find a reasonable means to access what we  have,” he said. “We’ve never heard from his replacement. We’ve never  heard anything from the local detachment.”
 
Clark contradicted the claim, saying, “The  local detachment commander is engaged and has spoken to local Chiefs,  Elders and other community members on this and many other matters  concerning the Gitxsan and other Indigenous Peoples.” 
 
He added, “Senior leaders in North  District are ready and willing to participate in continued discussions  but we must also acknowledge our legal obligations during such  injunctions and that our response, as well as the resources needed, will  be dependent upon protester actions.” 
 
For Gwiiyeehl, discussion and dialogue remains the best course of action. 
 
“We put our best foot forward. We signed an agreement and we’re willing to work together.”
 
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