Court order obtained against Gitxsan 
protesters
By Staff Writer - Terrace 
Standard
Published: December 
08, 2011 7:00 AM
Updated: December 08, 2011 7:04 
AM
THERE ARE reports this morning 
that a BC Supreme Court order has been obtained to stop trespassing at and 
blocking access to the Gitxsan Treaty Society office in 
Hazelton.
Gitxsan unhappy with the 
society's signing of an economic benefits agreement with Enbridge stemming from 
its Northern Gateway oil pipeline have been at the office for several days 
now.
“The order was obtained by [the Gitxsan Treaty Society] without 
notice to anyone, after they appeared before Justice Davies in Vancouver,” 
reads 
a release from hereditary chiefs unhappy with the Enbridge 
deal.
It says police officers are 
“authorized to arrest anyone blocking access to the [treaty society] 
premises.”
Gitxsan chief land claims 
negotiator Elmer Derrick from the treaty society, which was established to 
negotiate a land claims deal and which controls several business enterprises, 
on 
Dec. 2 signed a deal with senior Enbridge official Janet Holder laying out 
benefits worth $7 million tied to obtaining an equity position in the Northern 
Gateway pipeline project.
That touched off a series of 
protests by Gitxsan who say Derrick and the society had no authority to sign 
the 
deal.
The protesting Gitxsan also say 
a majority of Gitxsan, including hereditary chiefs, are opposed to the pipeline 
plan they say poses an unacceptable environmental risk.
The protesting Gitxsan who have 
been at the treaty society offices for several days say they fired the 
society's 
board of directors and senior staffers Dec. 6 “on loss of confidence and breach 
of the Gitxsan law and protocols.”
“We cannot allow [the society] to continue to conduct Gitxsan 
business under false pretenses when they have no authority to do so,” reads the 
release from Gitxsan hereditary chiefs unhappy with the deal.
Speaking late last week, 
Derrick said the society had the backing of a majority of hereditary chiefs to 
sign the Enbridge deal.
Enbridge says it will provide 
an equity stake worth 10 per cent of the $5.5 billion pipeline project to First 
Nations and will lend money at favourable rates to make that 
happen.
It says it has identified more 
than 40 First Nations in BC and Alberta it says meet its criteria of having 
reserve or traditional territory within 80km of the planned pipeline 
route.
The proposal pipeline route 
itself does not go through Gitksan traditional territory or reserve 
lands.
The Northern Gateway pipeline 
would run 1,100 kilometres in length, transporting Alberta oil to a marine 
export terminal at Kitimat.
First Nations and environmental 
groups say both the pipeline and the prospect of oil-laden tankers on the north 
coast are unacceptable.
Formal federal hearings into 
the project start next month.

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