[IPSM] 'We Can't Eat Oil, Gas and Minerals' : Tahltan occupation continues

Devin Butler Burke devin at riseup.net
Sun Feb 27 05:46:36 PST 2005


'We Can't Eat Oil, Gas and Minerals'

A TYEE SPECIAL REPORT: Revolt against pro-business Tahltan chief shines
light on ambitious development plans in B.C.'s north.

Wed., Feb. 23, 2005

By Monte Paulsen

TheTyee.ca

[Second of a two-part series. Read the first part here:
http://www.thetyee.ca/News/current/TheSeizureatTelegraph.htm ]

The Tahltan elders who took over their band's Telegraph Creek
administration building more than a month ago have promised to stay put
until their elected chief resigns.
  "Jerry Asp has lost all credibility," said the elders-women and men
between the ages of 55 and 84-in a February 17 statement. "He is far too
cozy with industry and government, and poses a threat to our very
existence."
  The elders allege Asp acted beyond his authority when he and the Tahltan
Tribal Council signed a $250,000-a-year deal "to provide certainty for
resource development" in their traditional territories. And they say
Asp-who is addition to being Chief of the Telegraph Creek band, is also
Chief Operating Officer of the Tahltan Nation Development Corporation-is
caught in too powerful a conflict of interest to act in their best
interest. They elders fear that deal would empower Gordon Campbell's
Liberals to fast-track several mines, a gas field, a hydroelectric dam and
possibly a controversial road to the Alaskan coast.

First Nations artist Dempsey Bob is one of several Tahltan and Tlingit who
have joined the occupation since January 17. "We have to protect our
animals and fish," he said. "We can't eat oil, gas and minerals."

Both Chief, and Chief Operating Officer

Jerry Asp was elected to head the Tahltan Nation's largest band in 2003
and 2004. He was among the first chiefs elected after the Supreme Court of
Canada's Corbiere decision took effect. In order to force bands into
compliance with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Corbiere
requires bands to allow all members to vote in Indian Act elections-not
only those who live on reserve, as had been the practice.
  There are an estimated 5,000 Tahltan living throughout Canada, but only
about 1,500 live on the eleven reserves in northern B.C. Reserves near
Telegraph Creek, Dease Lake and Iskut serve as community centers.
  Oscar Dennis, a university educated Tahltan who is serving as a
spokesman for the elders, said that fewer than 400 Tahltan voted in the
last election. Dennis said the small number of participants is evidence of
Asp's lack of widespread support within the Tahltan nation. "He got in to
office through the support of his own family," Dennis said, "and others
who work for his Tahltan Nation Development Corporation."
  Asp founded the Tahltan Nation Development Corporation (TNDC) in 1985.
The company's shareholders include the Tahltan and Iskut bands. Asp served
as president and chief executive officer until 1993, and remains TNDC's
chief operating officer. TNDC has cleared roads into remote mines, built
mining operation sites and performed open-pit mining. According to its own
promotional releases, the company is the largest Native-owned and operated
heavy construction company in Western Canada.
  At Barrick Gold Corporation's Eskay Creek mine, for example, TNDC has a
life-of-mine contract to provide road construction, maintenance and
snow-clearing services. A TNDC subsidiary also reportedly provides
housekeeping and catering services to the fly-in mine, which is among the
highest grade gold and silver mines in the world.

Likewise, TNDC also has a deal to provide construction and roadwork to
Shell Canada, one of the other companies promised "certainty" under the
controversial 2004 agreement.  Last summer, Shell began drilling into
coalfields that partly underlie the Spatsizi Plateau Wilderness Park.
Shell plans to force methane gas from the coalfield by pumping massive
volumes of water underground. Shell's ambitious Mount Klappan project
represents an estimated 9 per cent of B.C.'s coalbed methane potential.

The Tahltan elders alleged these sorts of deals put Asp in a conflict of
interest. Said Dennis: "All the decisions he's making on behalf of the
Tahltan conveniently serve the interests of his company."
  Asp declined to talk to The Tyee for this article. (He hung up the phone
after saying only: "I'm not interested in talking to you.")

Asp talks frequently to pro-mining groups, however. He is vice-president
of Canadian Aboriginal Minerals Association-a group he helped create-and
uses this platform to talk about the jobs he's created. For example, he
talked to a 2004 Manitoba mining conference about the Eskay Creek mine,
where more than 34 per cent of the 320 on-site workers are native. Asp
reportedly said, "The Tahltans view this relationship as a win-win
situation for both the mining company, Barrick Gold Corporation, and the
Tahltans."
  Asp also spoke to freelance journalist Shirley Collingridge, who has
posted a profile of the Chief on her promotional web site. In
Vini Vidi Vici: Tahltan Chief Conquers Mining Industry, Collingridge wrote:
  "Overall, says Asp, the mining experience has been a very positive
experience for him. Besides successfully championing Aboriginal issues,
Asp has 'traveled all over the world on somebody else's nickel. They are
calling me every week to go somewhere.' In the past three years alone, Asp
has been once to Australia, twice to the U.K., and three times to South
America. Š 'Canada is considered the foremost expert in Aboriginal mining
relations today,' says Asp. 'That's why CAMA [the Canadian Aboriginal
Minerals Association] is invited around the world.'"

To tunnel toward Alaska

Tahltan Nation Development Corporation has also worked for NovaGold
Resources, which is considering construction of an open pit mine on
104,735 acres west of the Stikine River. NovaGold's Galore Creek project
was the subject of several presentations at the Dease Lake assembly that
triggered the elders' protest. Later this year, NovaGold plans to release
a prefeasibility study for what the company describes as one of the
largest undeveloped resources in North America.   Should TNDC obtain a
road construction contract for the NovaGold mine-as it has for several
similar projects-the non-union firm could wind up involved in its most
ambitions construction project yet: tunneling under a glacier. NovaGold
studied several options for an access road to the Galore Creek site, and
presented an overview of its two preferred routes at the Dease Lake
assembly. Both routes involve tunneling under ice, one for two kilometers
and the other for as much as 14 kilometers through
glacier-capped-limestone.
  The gated road proposed by NovaGold would be a controlled-access
corridor open only to mine vehicles bearing special use permits from the
province. But due to the location of the Galore Creek mine, the road would
inevitably lead from Hwy. 37 to the Alaska coast, along a highway route
akin to one that Alaskan politicians have spent 20 years trying to
develop.
  U.S. efforts to link the landlocked Alaska "panhandle" with the
continental highway system have escalated in recent years, as the state's
Republican congressional delegation found a ready ear in the Bush White
House. Prior to news of the NovaGold project, their favored route had been
to extend the TNDC-built access road to the Eskay Creek mine to the
Bradford Canal, meeting the fjord in the shadow of Tyee Mountain and
continuing at sea level to a new deep water port and ferry terminal near
Wrangell.
  The Galore Creek road would present the Alaska delegation with an
alternative route. And if TNDC or some other company were to complete the
tunneling under the less-rigid permitting process of a limited-use road,
the conversion of that route to a public road at a later date would face
less environmental scrutiny-since most of any damage would have already
been done.
  Studies conducted on both sides of the border have concluded that such a
road would reward Alaska's economy at the expense of British Columbia, as
Canadian resources flow overseas through U.S. ports.
  Galore Creek General Manager Carl Gagnier told The Tyee that NovaGold
had no intention of its mining road become part of the so-called Bradfield
Road.  "No. We've never seriously looked at that," he said. "That's
somebody's idea to develop something in Alaska."
  NovaGold's two other major projects are in the Alaskan interior. Its
massive Donlin Creek effort is a joint venture with Placer Dome, and its
and Ambler Project is a joint venture with Rio Tinto.  Galore Creek, in
fact, is the southernmost project listed on NovaGold's web site. Given
that permitting those Alaskan projects is crucial to the fast-growing
company's success, it's reasonable to assume that NovaGold has some degree
of contact with Alaskan political leaders who also back the Bradford road.
  Elders promise to remain

Nancy McGee is one of the Tahltan elders participating in the Telegraph
Creek protest. The proposed roads would traverse her family's traditional
trapping territory. After NovaGold presented its road-building options at
the Deese Lake assembly, she reportedly pointed a finger at the NovaGold
spokesman and said, "You're gonna' shit on our land."
  "In the past, a leader was watched from the time they were little," said
elder Henry Quock, who likes to tell stories and tease others at the
sit-in. "The elders chose a leader based solely on his ability to be
honest."
  The elders promise to continue their occupation until Asp resigns and
the 2004 "certainty" agreement is overturned.
  Asp has obtained a court order to have them forcibly removed, but had
not yet executed that order as this article went to press.

"The use of courts and laws to repress those without the financial means
to employ legal representation is well-known. However, for an Aboriginal
person to do the same in shameful," the elders replied. "Asp is prepared
to repress the dissenting voices in order to maintain a strangle hold on
his people."

  Monte Paulsen is a contributing editor at Vancouver's Shared Vision
magazine.





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