Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Former police station is camped on the Six Nations Police to help them

OHSWEKEN Ontario Provincial Police said the youth will be involved in lifting. A former police station is camped on the Six Nations Police to help them.

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A youth group for the Six Nations band council to remove the request for a ruling who Chris Chiefswood Road in the fourth line and set up tents outside the old police station.

The band versus the Council, including the appropriate police force “appropriate police force”, according to the application.

Policing responsibility for Six Nations rests with Six Nations Police, said OPP spokesperson Inspector Dave Ross.

He said, “Six Nations is policed by their own Six Nations police service and we would only assist if they requested us to do so”.

Ross said Monday he was not aware of any assistance requests made to the OPP from Six Nations police.

Asked if the OPP would be prepared to be part of such an eviction, Ross said: “I’m not going to speak to something that hasn’t happened yet ... I’m not going to speculate on a hypothetical question.”

A group of young people have “reclaimed” the area outside the old police station since May 22. They want the elected band council to turn the vacant building over to the hereditary Haudenosaunee Six Nations Confederacy so they can use it as a youth centre.

Control group members appear in court on Friday is a Brantford. The protestors held a rally outside the court that day's plan.

Ross said he did not confirm the band versus the request of the Council are aware of.