B.C. First Nations divided over  Enbridge pipeline  
The Canadian Press 

Updated: Sat. Dec. 3 
      2011 8:53 PM ET 
Members of a  British Columbia First Nation where hereditary chiefs have voiced 
support  for the Northern Gateway pipeline appear split over the controversial  
project. 
On Friday, a group of  hereditary chiefs from the Gitxsan in northwestern B.C. 
announced it had  accepted Enbridge Inc.'s (TSX:ENB) offer of an equity stake 
in the  $5.5-billion project. 
In announcing the  agreement, Chief Elmer Derrick heralded his community's 
"trusted"  relationship with Enbridge, and he estimated the deal would be worth 
at  least $7 million for the Gitxsan. 
But shortly after the  announcement, a group claiming to represent other 
hereditary chiefs,  including Geri McDougall, and four Gitxsan bands issued a 
news release  denouncing the agreement. 
The news release came  from the plaintiffs in a lawsuit against the Gitxsan 
Treaty Society and  the B.C. Treaty Commission over complaints about ongoing 
treaty  negotiations with the federal and provincial governments. 
The release said members  of the Gitxsan nation weren't consulted about the 
Northern Gateway  agreement, and argued it was wrong to sign a deal before the 
environmental  impact assessment process is finished. 
"Elmer Derrick and the  Gitxsan Treaty Society/Gitxsan Economic Development 
Corp. does not speak  for all Gitxsan," the news release said. 
"The representatives say  that Mr. Derrick has embarrassed and shamed the 
Gitxsan people by  undermining the 61 First Nations who are opposed to the 
project. The  representatives say, 'We stand in solidarity to those opposing 
it."' 
The  33,000-square-kilometre Gitxsan territory sits north of Northern Gateway's 
 proposed route, but the line would cross six streams that feed into a lake  
the First Nation relies on for fishing. 
The 1,200-kilometre  Northern Gateway pipeline proposal, which would bring 
diluted bitumen from  Alberta's oil sands to the B.C. coast, has been the 
source of considerable  controversy among First Nations communities and 
environmental groups. 
Enbridge has offered  equity stake agreements to 50 First Nations groups, 
although the Gitxsan  was the first the sign. The company claims a number of 
other communities  are prepared to sign, but hasn't said which ones or when 
that would  happen. 
Other aboriginal  communities have been fiercely critical of the pipeline, 
vowing to take  legal action to stop it. Currently, 61 First Nations 
communities have  signed the Save the Fraser Declaration against the pipeline. 
A federal review panel  is preparing to hold public hearings into the pipeline 
project early in  the new year. 
The provincial and  federal governments have both been strong proponents of the 
project,  particularly as political controversy in the United States delays  
TransCanada Corp.'s (TSX:TRP) Keystone XL line. 
The U.S. State  Department has effectively delayed the Keystone XL until early 
2013 --  after the next presidential election -- by ordering TransCanada to 
come up  with a new route through Nebraska to avoid an important source of  
water.    

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