Teepee erected in ceremony on Parliament Hill after opposition from police - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 01:40 AM | Calgary | -0.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Teepee erected in ceremony on Parliament Hill after opposition from police

A group of Indigenous people and supporters headed to Parliament Hill Wednesday night to try and perform a ceremony and erect a teepee, but faced opposition from police. The teepee was eventually erected in a ceremony early Thursday morning.

Canada Day celebrations expected to draw big crowds to Parliament Hill on July 1

Reoccupation protest in Parliamentary precinct

7 years ago
Duration 0:21
A group of Indigenous people and supporters headed to Parliament Hill Wednesday night to try to perform a ceremony and erect a teepee, but faced opposition from police.

A group of Indigenous people and supporters headed to Parliament Hill Wednesday night to try toperform a ceremony and erect a teepee, but faced opposition from police.

A large crowd had gathered as part of a four-day Canada Day protest.

A video on social media showed officers removing at least one person from the area. CBC's Elyse Skura said at least nine people were arrested and detained.Those individuals were later released.

The teepee was eventually erected in a ceremony early Thursday morning.

"It is right by the east entrance and police have set up metal barriers that restrict access from that area to the rest of the Hill," Skura reported. "The demonstrators say they are not happy and don't consider this a compromise because they want to be on the grounds, but they are satisfied they could continue their ceremony."

Several of the individuals reported receivinga notice of trespass, which means they can't return to Parliament Hill for six months.

Later, however, there were cheers as people who had been detained appeared back on site.

According to the CBC'sOmar Dabaghi-Pacheco, "demonstrators were also heard telling police they did not feel they needed a permit for what they considered aFirst Nations religious ceremony on Parliament Hill."

Organizers say the demonstration marks the first day of a "reoccupation" ceremony to counter Canada's upcoming150th anniversary celebrations.

A statement ahead of the event said the ceremony "aims to simultaneously unsettle the 150thanniversary while asserting place-based relationship on our lands that were never ceded, and to educate the general public on the atrocities that the occupying government continues to inflict on our Nation's and our Mother."

Parliament Hill Canada Day celebrations draw large crowdsevery year.

People hold up a sign during a demonstration on Parliament Hill, as a crowd gathered to erect a teepee as part of a four-day Canada Day protest, in Ottawa on Thursday. (Justin Tang/Canadian Press)

With files from Elyse Skura, Omar Dabaghi-Pacheco and The Canadian Press