First Nation to file series of lawsuits against N.S. government, commercial fishers
INDIAN BROOK, N.S. — A Mi’kmaq First Nation that encountered violence after it opened a self-regulated lobster fishery says it will sue non-Indigenous fishers and the Nova Scotia government for alleged damages incurred by its members.
Part of the legal action includes a constitutional challenge against a provincial law that has prevented the band from selling its lobster catch, Ron Pink, the lawyer for Sipekne’katik First Nation, said Thursday.
“We’re pursuing injuries to individuals and disruption to their fishing by certain individuals,” Pink told a news conference at the band office. “We’ll have lawsuits against all those who interfere with our fishery.”
The lawsuits, he said, will also target fish buyers and other businesses that refused to deal with the Mi’kmaq community after it launched its lobster fishery in St. Marys Bay from a wharf in Saulnierville, N.S.