First Nations leaders to meet UN regarding Taseko project

BY PETER O'NEIL, VANCOUVER SUNOCTOBER 10, 2013 2:01 AM

http://www.vancouversun.com/news/First+Nations+leaders+meet+regarding+Taseko+project/9020250/story.html
First Nations leaders fighting one of B.C.'s most controversial resource 
development projects will get their case heard in Vancouver today by the United 
Nations envoy on aboriginal rights.

UN Special Rapporteur James Anaya will meet with aboriginal leaders, including 
members of the Tsilhqot'in National Government, who are opposing Taseko Mines' 
gold-copper project near Williams Lake.

Anaya, who is touring Canada to gather evidence for a report on human rights 
issues facing aboriginal Canadians, has written extensively on the importance 
of aboriginal consent before resource projects proceed.

The Supreme Court of Canada is hearing a potential landmark landclaims case 
involving the Tsilhqot'in next month.

Tsilhqot'in chairman Joe Alphonse is returning from two days of lobbying in 
Ottawa, fearful of the Harper government's approach to major projects. Both 
federal and B.C. scientists have expressed concerns about the risk that Taseko 
won't be able to keep its promise to protect Fish Lake, which will be 500 
metres from a large proposed open-pit mine and 2.5 kilometres from a tailings 
dump.

But Alphonse said he fears the Harper government will ignore those concerns and 
approve the mine even if a federal review panel concludes the project poses 
environmental risks.

"We're not being listened to by this government," Alphonse said Wednesday. 
"They put the almighty dollar and politics ahead of the environment, aboriginal 
rights and science."

Alphonse said he is confident a panel established under the Canadian 
Environmental Assessment Act will find plenty of flaws in Taseko's bid to 
construct a $1.5-billion mine 125 kilometres southwest of Williams Lake. The 
federal government rejected Taseko's initial application in 2011 after a 
"scathing" CEAA panel report on the environmental implications of draining Fish 
Lake and using it as a tailings dump. The company is promising in its new 
application to save the lake, which the Tsilhqot'in say is cherished by area 
First Nations for traditional hunting and fishing.

Taseko president Russ Hallbauer, in an essay published in The Vancouver Sun 
last month, said mine opponents waged a "campaign of misinformation" at panel 
hearings over the summer.

The Tsilhqot'in countered with its own argument in The Sun, citing 22 different 
statements made by federal and B.C. officials expressing environmental concerns 
during the panel hearings.

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