Big Oil vs. Native Community: Canada's First Nations Challenges Shell's Plan to Mine Tar Sands
http://www.alternet.org/world/big-oil-vs-native-community-canadas-first-nations-challenges-shells-plan-mine-tar-sands
Fort Chipewyan is a small indigenous community on the edge of vast Lake Athabasca in Albertas remote north, accessible only by plane in summer and by snow road in winter. The town is directly downstream from the Alberta tar sandsCanadas wildly lucrative, hotly debated, and environmentally catastrophic energy project.
Residents say that tar sands mining is not only dangerous but illegal because it violates the rights laid out in Treaty 8, an agreement signed in 1899 by Queen Victoria and various First Nations. Their legal challenge to the tar sands project could have a powerful impact on the legal role of treaties with First Nations people.
It should come as no surprise that Fort Chips relationship to the tar sands industry is a contentious one. Being first in line downstream means that residents are the first to feel the effects of pollution: poisoned water , air, and animals. The deformed fish with bulbous tumors that residents pull from Lake Athabasca are legendary, as are the stories of Fort Chips abnormally frequent cases of rare forms of cancer.
The Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation (ACFN), many of whose members live in Fort Chip, responded on October 1 with a landmark constitutional challenge to Shell Canadas expansion of its Jackpine tar sands mine . The challenge states that the expansion would be a further assault on their rights as First Nations people, which are federally protected under Treaty 8.