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Wet'suwet'en pipeline supporters feel shut out of talks, ministers told
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Placeline/People
City Vaughan
Country Canada

Newsroom Ready: Wet'suwet'en pipeline supporters feel shut out of talks, ministers told

Federal cabinet ministers are facing pointed questions about why elected band chiefs and women of the Wet'suwet'en Nation who support a disputed natural gas pipeline in British Columbia were not part of meetings with federal and provincial cabinet ministers aimed at de-escalating tensions. Conservative MPs pressed Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett and Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller on how band council chiefs who had signed deals for a project they believed would benefit their communities felt shut out of the talks. Theresa Tait-Day of the Wet'suwet'en Matrilineal Coalition says the chiefs who took part in meetings with Ottawa and B.C. don't speak for the whole nation. 
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Information
Source name: 
The Canadian Press
Unique identifier: CP17157906 
Legacy Identifier: r_LNG-Pipeline20200310T1705 
Type: Video 
Duration: 2m9s 
Dimensions: 1920px × 1080px     159.88 MB 
Create Date: 3/10/2020 5:05:00 PM 
Display aspect ratio: 16:9 
Tags
blockade
indigenous
Meetings
negotiation
pipeline
protest
Wet'suwet'en