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Page 7 - தொழிற்சங்கம் ஆஃப் பிரிட்டிஷ் கொலம்பியா இந்தியன் முதல்வர்கள் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Union of B C Indian Chiefs says it is appalled at discovery of severed bear paws

Union of B C Indian Chiefs says it is appalled at discovery of severed bear paws | iNFOnews

Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs says it is appalled at discovery of severed bear paws Bear paws recovered by the B.C. Conservation Officer Service are shown in this recent handout photo. The Union of BC Indian Chiefs says it is appalled and horrified at the gruesome discovery of severed paws in the province s Interior. Conservation officers said they re investigating the discovery of the animal parts along a forest service road in Anglemont. The Union of B.C.Indian Chiefs says in a news release that up to 100 bear paws were found near Shuswap Lake on Sunday. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO - B.C. Conservation Officer Service

Val Mowatt Is Dying of Liver Disease So Why Can t She Get a Transplant?

Like Her Sisters Before Her, Val Mowatt Is Dying Of Liver Disease. So Why Can’t She Get A Transplant? Are you going to make me do the same thing that my sisters did sit and wait to die? Jessica McDiarmid Updated (The sisters, from left to right: Judy, Veronica and Val) First, they lost Judy. The youngest sister in a large family from the Gitxsan Nation in northwest British Columbia, she was in her forties when she died. She was diagnosed with primary biliary cholangitis, an autoimmune disease that destroys the liver, and put on the province’s waitlist for a transplant. She died waiting, in 2014.

Why won t this giant oil pipeline reveal its secret backers?

Why won’t this giant oil pipeline reveal its secret backers? Carl Meyer for Canada s National Observer and Emily Holden for Floodlight © Provided by The Guardian Photograph: Candace Elliott/Reuters Nestled in the harbors of Vancouver, the Tsleil-Waututh Nation has lived for thousands of years within an inlet set against the mountain views of the Pacific north-west. But across the water from Tsleil-Waututh Nation’s reserve, less than 2km away, or a little over a mile, is a jarring juxtaposition: an industrial terminal for the large Trans Mountain oil pipeline. Oil tankers have frequented the terminal weekly for years, and now it is being enlarged so Trans Mountain can triple the amount of oil it transports from the landlocked oil sands of Alberta to the west coast. Traffic will increase by sevenfold – bringing in up to 34 giant oil tankers a month and three barges, the Canadian government-owned company has forecasted.

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