The 3rd Annual Unis’tot’en Action Camp will see a lot of activities around building solidarity and campaign and action planning for communities who will stop the proposed and approved pipelines and mining projects that are unwelcome in the north of Unceded Occupied so called bc and canada.
The camp dates are August 6 – 10, 2012. Registration for delegations and individuals will soon follow this posting.
The camp location is at 66km on the Morice River West FSR and is at the shore of the Wedzin Kwah and mouth of the Gosnell Creek. These are all tributary to the the Skeena, Bulkley, and Babine Rivers. The proposed pipelines from Northern Gateway, Kitimat Summit Lake Looping Project, and the Pembina and Kinder Morgan Pipelines seek to cross the rivers at the exact point where the resistance camp is built in Unis’tot’en Territory of Talbits Kwah.
The Lhe Lin Liyin, along with other strong uncompromising allies will stop this destructive path, for the future generations, for the biodiversity, and for solidarity with our neighbours living amidst the heavy impacts in the Tar Sands Affected areas in Northern Alberta, and regions heavily affected by Fracking Natural Gas and Shale Oil, as well as communities impacted by Refineries, Pipelines, and Fuel Terminals and Port Expansions.
The 3rd Annual Unis’tot’en Action Camp registration and list of items, and calendar will be available on this page soon. When it is available the update will be sent on twitter, facebook, and emails. For more information on the camp please telephone Freda Huson at 250 847 8897 and email at fhuson@gmail.com.
Thank you for your interest in the 3rd Annual Unis’tot’en Action Camp! Talk to you very soon.
Indigenous victory in Ecuador: The Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR) ruling in Sarayaku v. Ecuador, made public on Wednesday, ends a decade-long legal battle by the Sarayaku Indigenous People – backed by their lawyers Mario Melo and the Centre for Justice and International Law (CEJIL) – after a foreign oil company was allowed to encroach on their traditional lands in the early 2000s without consultation with the Sarayaku.
We would love to join you for a few hours today as we are driving from Tahltan Territory on our way to Coast Salish Territory. We have been invited by our friends the Wickhams who are helping with the wedding. Thank You. Ann Jacob and Stan Tomandl