“On October 13, 1965, we held a ‘fish-in’ on the Nisqually River to try and bring a focus on our fishing fight with State of Washington… It ended with 6 Indians in jail and dazed Indian kids wondering ‘what happened?’”

“On October 13, 1965, we held a ‘fish-in’ on the Nisqually River to try and bring a focus on our fishing fight with State of Washington… It ended with 6 Indians in jail and dazed Indian kids wondering ‘what happened?’”
“It seemed that all we were ever going to accomplish was organizing more bureaucratic offices. Then something happened about a year ago — Wounded Knee — and things started happening all over the country.”
The RCMP may serve as Canada’s federal police force, but in relation to Indigenous peoples it is not so much a domestic policing agency as an occupying foreign army.
A collection of videos from the current wave of Indigenous resistance
BC’s recent adoption of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) through Bill 41 was the subject of a major corporate conference at the Vancouver Convention Centre on January 14th, 2020, focused on the expanded business opportunities that have supposedly been unlocked in the Declaration’s wake.
Contradictions are rife in the BC Supreme Court’s granting of a legal injunction against the Wet’suwet’en people and the BC government’s recent adoption of UNDRIP.