July - 2006
Tsimshian deliver 'no fish farms' message
Rudy Kelly
Raven's Eye Writer
Prince Rupert
The Allied Tsimshian Tribes (ATT) brought just one message
when their representatives visited Norway in June, and it was
a clear and emphatic one: Fish farms are not welcome in their
territory.
That message was heard by a wide range of prominent people in
the country, home to the world's leading fish farm corporations,
and it was backed by delegates from southern B.C., the United
States and Chile.
The visit attracted international attention and at the centre
of it all was Allied Tsimshian Tribes representative Eugene Bryant,
who found himself suddenly overwhelmed with the responsibility
he bore.
"When I was over there, attending all these meetings and
doing all these media interviews, it suddenly hit me as to how
many people I was really representing," said Bryant. "Yes,
I was officially representing the Allied Tribes but I was also,
essentially, representing all First Nations who depend on the
Skeena River and everyone, including non-First Nations, who depend
on the North Coast's waters."
Fish farms pose a danger not only to the First Nations communities
that have depended on the rivers and oceans for centuries, said
Bryant, but to everyone, from the tourism industry to the service
industry.
"Now I was speaking for small business and tourism, for
sports fishermen, hotel operators and charter businesses; some
that I normally don't fight for. I had to put my bias aside and
speak with one voice," said Bryant. "Because nobody
is going to come here to see a polluted, desert ocean. They come
here to see a clean, pristine environment."
Along with delegates from Chile and the U.S, Bryant was joined
by Chief Bob Chamberlin of the Musgamagw Tsawataineuk Nation,
located in the Broughton Archipelago off the northeast coast
of Vancouver Island.
The Broughton Archipelago is considered by fish farm opponents
to be a prime example of the devastating consequences of fish
farms. There are 27 fish farms in the area and more than half
of them are located directly in the path of migrating pink salmon.
In 2002, 3,600,000 pinks were expected to spawn but only 147,000
returned. Evidence suggests that the salmon were killed by the
huge numbers of sea lice that open pen fish farms produce.
In his letter to Norway's king and prime minister, Chamberlin
wrote the fish farms are causing "irreparable damage to
the marine environment and pushing local wild salmon stocks to
the brink of extinction," as well as negatively affecting
the bi-valve, herring, eulichan, crustaceans and ground fish.
Although the delegation was unable to meet directly with the
king and prime minister, they did manage to crash the annual
general meeting of Pan Fish, the biggest fish farm company on
the planet.
"We weren't invited to the AGM, of course, so we just showed
up. We didn't know if they would let us in or not," smiled
Bryant. "But they let us in and gave us 10 minutes to speak.
You could see the chief executive (Atle Eide) wasn't impressed
at all but I was optimistic with the response from some of the
stakeholders we met with after the meeting, and of some of the
local people."
The declaration Bryant presented on behalf of the ATT reads:
"We, the First Nations of the Skeena River and its approaches,
proclaim the waters of our traditional territories a fish farm
free, wild salmon only, zone."
Currently, there are no open pen fish farms in Tsimshian territory,
although a Pan Fish operation is being developed in the Tsimshian
community of Kitkatla. That may change, though, as shortly after
Bryant's visit to the company's AGM, Eide told a Norwegian newspaper
that Pan Fish would not be making any new fish farm investments
in B.C. that aren't welcome.
Also, shortly after the visit, a major shareholder, Fritt Ord,
withdrew it holdings based on ethical standards.
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