Talks the way to settle blockades, Trudeau insists, as calls for action grow louder
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his cabinet are rejecting demands from conservatives on Parliament Hill and in provincial legislatures to break up blockades of rail lines by Indigenous protesters and their supporters as pressure on the Liberal government to solve the crisis continues to mount.
The demonstrations are in support of Wet’suwet’en First Nation hereditary chiefs who oppose a natural gas pipeline through their traditional territory in northern British Columbia.
Public Safety Minister Bill Blair said Wednesday the Liberals won’t issue an ultimatum to remove the blockades, raised in sympathy with the hereditary chiefs and in opposition to a natural-gas pipeline. But there’s no sign of the peaceable talks the government says are the only way to reach a lasting resolution to the dispute.
“I’m reluctant to put a deadline to something because I find that’s not a very effective means of negotiation,” Blair said.