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Young Indigenous land defender heads to court

Vanessa Gray has a history of standing up against environmental racism. Photo via Gray's GoFundMe page

Young land defender Vanessa Gray made a virtual appearance in an Ontario court on Wednesday, with her supporters quickly blocked from displaying their messages that a string of charges against her should be dropped.

Gray, from the Aamjiwnaang First Nation near Sarnia, was detained soon after a solidarity action in Toronto on Nov. 21 — the only one charged in relation to the blocking of a freight railway line in support of the Wet’suwet’en First Nation, whose hereditary chiefs oppose the construction of a pipeline in their unceded territory in northern B.C.

Gray is a well-known environmental activist focused primarily on pollution and its harmful effects in Ontario’s Chemical Valley, which sits on Aamjiwnaang territory and is the largest complex of petrochemical facilities in Canada.

She and her supporters say the charges fit a pattern of seeking to silence Indigenous land defenders and suppress Indigenous organizing.

“The targeting of Gray is part of a larger pattern of colonial violence in which the Canadian state collaborates with corporations to criminalize Indigenous Land Defenders for the sake of industry interests,” the Mining Injustice Solidarity Network activist group said soon after the charges were laid.

Members of the group and others tried to attend the virtual hearing using the name "Drop the Charges" but were quickly told that to join the video conference they would have to turn on their cameras to confirm their identities to the judge.

During the proceedings, the judge agreed to remove certain release conditions initially imposed on Gray, including that she not go on Canadian Pacific Railway property.

The first court date to hear the case has been scheduled for Feb. 9.

On a website where she has raised her goal of $10,000 to cover legal costs, Gray said was wrongly charged with three counts of mischief, interference with property, causing a disturbance, loitering, unlawful assembly, trespassing, and failure to give way.

“Education and understanding our interconnected struggles is essential to our ever-growing movement, but we must take risks for a sustainable and just future," she writes on the fundraising site.

Heavily armed RCMP members raided Wet’suwet’en checkpoints late last year, dismantling a blockade against the construction of TC Energy’s multibillion-dollar Coastal GasLink natural gas pipeline and arresting land defenders as well as journalists and legal observers.

Some of those detained allege they were treated in a demeaning way, transported in enclosures about the size of a dog kennel and forced to appear before a judge in their long underwear and in shackles.

That was just the latest salvo in a years-long dispute, with earlier RCMP interventions leading to extensive solidarity actions that threw rail transportation into chaos across the country in the months before the arrival of COVID-19.

Morgan Sharp / Local Journalism Initiative / Canada’s National Observer

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