RCMP release video of alleged attacks at Coastal GasLink pipeline worksite - Action News
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British Columbia

RCMP release video of alleged attacks at Coastal GasLink pipeline worksite

As RCMP continue to investigateviolenceat a pipeline construction site in northern B.C., investigators have released video showing people, some with axes, attacking a vehicle with someoneinside.

No Coastal GasLink employees were injured, police say

Machinery Coastal GasLink says was damaged near its Morice River drill pad near Houston, B.C., on Feb 17, 2022. RCMP has released video of suspects in the alleged attack. (Coastal GasLink)

As RCMP continue to investigatereports of violenceat a pipeline construction site in northern B.C., investigators have released video showing people, some with axes, attacking a vehicle with someoneinside.

RCMP said Tuesday the video contains footage of people similarly dressed storming the Coastal GasLink(CGL) property, swinging axes at a company vehicle, spray painting a side window and setting off a suspected flare gun.

No CGL employees were injured,police said.

RCMP said they were called to Marten Forest Service Road about 60 kilometres south of Houston, B.C., shortly after midnight on Feb. 17 after CGL security reported violence at the site, where workers are helping build part of a 670-kilometre natural gas pipeline.

RCMP said around 20 people allegedly attacked security guards and employees.

"So these individuals, the 20 or so masked individuals, took these employees by surprise in a very aggressive and calculated method," Chief Supt. Warren Brown told CBC Friday morning.

CGL said heavy equipment atthe site was commandeered by the attackers and used to damage other equipment, and that there were "millions of dollars in damage" to machinery although they're still estimating the final cost.

RCMP also said attackers used machinery at the site to damage buildings and the drill pad. When police arrived to investigate thedamage, the attackers had already left, they said.

Police said Tuesday thataccess to the area is being controlled to ensuresafety and preserve evidence.

In anaccount published on the CGL website, a person CGLsays is an employee identified only as Trevor described masked people surrounding his vehicle and smashing it with axes.

The post also included an image of a damaged trailer.

A picture on the Coastal GasLink website shows a damaged trailer on the construction site in northern B.C. Neither RCMP nor CGL have officially commented on a motive for the attack. (Coastal GasLink)

A hotly contested pipeline

So far, neither the police nor CGL have explicitly said whether they believe the alleged attack is tied to opposition to the hotly contested pipeline that is planned to extend from northeastern B.C. to Kitimat on the province's North Coastthrough the territory of the Wet'suwet'en Nation.

CGL said the project is fully authorized and permitted by governmentand has the support of all 20 First Nation band councils, including five of the six band councils in the Wet'suwet'en Nation.

However, Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs have opposed the project, saying band councils do not have authority over land beyond reserve boundaries.

In December 2019,the B.C. Supreme Courtgranted an injunctionagainst members of the Wet'suwe'ten Nation who were blockingaccess to the worksite located within itsterritory.Earlier that year, policemade more than a dozen arrestsof people identifying as land defenders,who had set up blockades to stop construction.

In November 2021,RCMP made another set of arrests ofWet'suwet'en members. Police used a chainsaw to break down the door of a cabin where people opposed to the pipeline had been staying. Two journalists were also arrested.

In both cases, police were met with little resistance, despite preparing for high levels of violence.

In a statement issued Saturday, Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefssaid they did not have enough information to comment on the situation.

The statement denounced violence and expressed concern over the safety of its members who live in the area.