Article Origin
Volume
Issue
Year
Page 3
An RCMP investigation unit is on the Waterhen First Nation piecing
together the events of a month-long armed standoff that displaced 300
residents from their homes.
Police are looking into reports of criminal activities believed to have
been committed by rebel members of the Waterhen First Nation. The
crimes include vandalism, looting and arson. At least three houses were
burned to the ground, including the residence of Chief Harvey Nepinak.
A temporary RCMP detachment will be set up on the reserve for the next
three weeks to a month, said RCMP Cpl. Randy Daley.
"We have a long investigation to do here into all the activities that
have been going on. We want to make sure that people can get back to
their lives as quickly as possible.
The standoff ended on May 19, when police on morning patrol noticed
that the barricade, usually defended by armed rebels, was unmanned.
They seized the opportunity to secure the 20-metre-long structure, built
with old cars, tractors and wagons. The 100-man tactical unit then
moved cautiously into the community, but met little resistance. No
shots were fired and no injuries were reported.
By evening the rebels, along with their leader Gordon Catcheway, had
been taken into custody. Among those arrested were members of the
Winnipeg Warriors, an Aboriginal street gang with a reputation for
violence and criminal activity.
The sudden end to the standoff came at a time when tensions between
reserve dissidents and police had escalated. Two days earlier Catcheway
backed away from a tentative agreement to end the standoff. That same
evening the chief's house was set ablaze, followed by police cutting off
phone service.
Police also fired flares toward the barricade and sounded sirens for a
couple of hours overnight in an attempt to intimidate those still on
reserve.
The standoff began April 14, when opponents of Chief Nepinak erected
the barricade and banished the chief and his supporters from the
community. The rebels demanded a separate reserve of their own,
accusing Nepinak of corruption and intimidation. The chief has always
denied the charges..
Catcheway has been trying unsuccessfully to remove Nepinak from office
for many years. He lost the last two elections to the chief, the most
recent one held in November, 1995. Local legend has it that the bad
blood between the Catcheway and Nepinak families date back over 100
years.
Approximately 300 band members spent the duration of the standoff in
the nearby community of Dauphin.
A variety of prominent people met with the rebels during the month
hoping to negotiate an end to the conflict. They included an associate
chief provincial court judge, two MLAs, a Pentecostal minster, a reserve
Elder and the mayor of a nearby community.
- 1695 views