Protesters pack up camp at B.C. legislature after five arrests Wednesday night
VICTORIA — Dozens of Indigenous youth and their supporters packed blankets and tarps Thursday, ending a 17-day protest at British Columbia’s legislature that saw a fire burning constantly at the front steps and people camping overnight at the building’s ceremonial gates.
The conclusion of the protest followed the arrests of five people who refused to leave the building Wednesday night after meeting with Scott Fraser, B.C.’s minister of Indigenous relations and reconciliation.
Ta’Kaiya Blaney said the Indigenous youth are leaving the legislature but their movement for the rights of Aboriginal Peoples continues. She said the protest to support Wet’suwet’en hereditary chiefs in northwest B.C. who oppose a natural gas pipeline through their traditional territories was successful.
“The Indigenous youth are coming together in ways that go beyond the pipeline,” said Blaney. “It’s about Indigenous sovereignty and it’s about affirming for our young people that we can take our power back.”