PM urges patience, promises reconciliation in face of anti-pipeline blockades
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised to redouble reconciliation efforts with Indigenous Peoples Tuesday as he sought to ease tensions over nationwide blockades erected in opposition to a British Columbia pipeline project.
Even as Trudeau called for patience, questions abounded over how he planned to make good on his promise. He faced demands from the Opposition Conservatives to crack down on protesters who have disrupted large parts of the country’s transportation network.
Several First Nations leaders agreed in their own news conference in Ottawa that the dispute speaks to broader — and long-standing — concerns from Indigenous communities, but they also appeared uncertain over how the current crisis can be truly resolved.
Trudeau delivered his most extensive remarks yet on the blockades and the $6.6-billion natural-gas pipeline protesters oppose in an address to the House of Commons, where MPs were preparing to hold an emergency debate on the standoff.