From MTV
Additional coverage at MSNBC
For extensive and up to date coverage, visit the Dirty Oil Sands website.
James Cameron Supports Aboriginal People In Lawsuit Against Canada
After spreading word of the colonial persecution of a tribe of blue
aliens on a natural-resource-rich planet called Pandora, James Cameron
has been focusing his environmental activism closer to home. In April,
the "Avatar" director pledged to assist Brazilian tribes
in their fight against the construction of a controversial dam project,
and now he has committed to helping aboriginal peoples in Canada take
legal action in connection with pollution from oil development.
Cameron, who was born in Ontario, Canada, met privately with
aboriginal leaders and residents of Fort Chipewyan, Alberta, on Tuesday
to discuss the community's concerns about the connection between high
cancer rates and water, air and wildlife pollution stemming from ongoing
exploration and extraction of oil sands, according to The Vancouver Sun.
"I will be meeting with [Alberta] Premier [Ed] Stelmach tomorrow
and I will be doing a press conference afterwards to get the word out
there about what's happening here," he told the paper. "Hopefully we can
make a difference and get things moving in the right direction. It's
going to be a fight, as I'm sure you know. But if you all stand together
and work together with the other First Nations, I think we can draw a
line in the sand here."
Fort Chipewyan residents have long complained about high rates of
cancer and other illnesses they say stem from oil-sands development and
are planning legal action against the provincial and federal
governments. In 2009, the Sun reports, the Alberta Cancer Board
announced that Fort Chipewyan residents had experienced 30 percent more
cancer cases than normal, though the community's small population might
have rendered that rate a statistical anomaly. The Alberta government
has denied that oil-industry activities have negatively impacted
communities downstream from development sites.
The extent of Cameron's assistance is still being determined. In
addition to his meeting with government officials and the media
attention that his presence attracts, the Oscar winner might directly
contribute to legal efforts or help with a fundraising drive.
"There's a big imperative for them to get this tar-sands oil
right," Cameron said. "We're not saying they have to stop development,
we're not saying they have to take the jobs away. We're just saying
they've got to do it right. They've got to do it in a way that's
responsible. Responsible development, responsible to the environment and
responsible to the people directly affected by it. That's not a lot to
ask. There's a lot of money at stake here, and they should spend some of
it to fix this problem."
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